I've had a wonderful weekend away in Guadalupe, a small town of 2,000 in the Cáceres province of Extremadura. There is another language assistant there named Christine who invited me to stay with her. Her town is famous for the monastery that dominates the skyline of the town (Can you say skyline for a small town?)
In Guadalupe, I visited the monastery's museums (embroidery museum, choir hymnal museum, sculpture and painting museum, etc.) and went to mass on Sunday. There are paintings by Goya, El Greco and Zurbarán there! There is also a famous icon, the Virgin of Guadalupe, who was said to have been buried with St. Luke, disinterred and brought to Spain and later discovered in a well by a peasant (Hmmm, sound familiar to the Mexican story?). Anyhow, the religious image is a small statue who is made out of a dark wood. She has a very primitive looking carved face. Anyway, on the tour we were allowed to enter a small chapel behind the altar where they rotated the icon so that people could see it up close. The tour group I was with was a group of retired Spanish people who all wanted to kiss a picture of the icon. They did that then they left some coins in a offering box to the side of the statue. The little framed photograph that they kissed was placed back at the feet of the Virgin by the Franciscan monk who lives there.
The day before the visit to the Monastery, we went to Christine's friend's country house. It was only a five minute walk outside of the town, but it was in a very rural spot. It was a modest but handsome house filled with local artisan ceramics. It also had a pool and an orchard. The neighbor didn't have a house on his land, but he had animals, so while we ate we heard the bleating of sheep and the ringing bells around the goat's collars.
Now, I'm back in my school, Nº 12 Ciudad Jardin, in Badajoz and I'm preparing a lesson for next week. My second year students are about the age of eighth-graders in the US. They are learning about food and are going to being learning vocabulary for reading recipes. I'm going to teach them how to make a PB & J sandwich next week. The teacher is worried that it'll make a mess, but I say phooey to him....I think the kids need a hands-on lesson from time to time.
