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Host a Foreign Exchange Student
Change the world and create understanding one person and one family at a time by hosting a foreign exchange student!

A blog about Family & Home, Relationships, and Travel.
About mt2127


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Margo Tyree
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December 16, 1949
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Tourist's eye view - Brazil
WOW ! Brazil was amazing!
THIS LAND IS YOUR LAND...
Foreign Exchange on YouTube
Wedding in Brazil
Host a Foreign Exchange Student
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Location: Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, RJ 22080-101

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If visiting Brazil doesn't amaze and put you into a sense of awe at the incredible beauty of this place on Earth, your vision needs checking!  Riding the aerial tramway up to the top of Sugar Loaf (Pao Azucar) initially was a bit daunting ... I couldn't stop thinking about that 007 movie where there was fighting on top of the swinging tram car!  But amazingly, the ride was smooth and nonfrightening even though the tram is almost 100 % glass.   The view is just so amazing it overwhelms the senses.  At that moment I thought nothing could be more beautiful.  That was before I traveled up a mountain on a streetcar to Corcovado to see the Cristo.  Oh my gosh! 

Corcovado is higher than Pao Azucar which can be seen below along with an incredible vista of Rio de Janeiro, the harbor(s) and Copacabana!  Seeing the view combined with the enormous and amazing statue of Christ overlooking it all, arms widespread to encompass the entire world, was inspirational to say the least.

I definitely recommend this as a vacation destination!

Posted in the Travel interest group.
Topics: Sugan Loaf, Corcovado, Christ the Redeemer, Cristo, Pao Azucar
posted by mt2127 on Wednesday, July 30, 2008 at 04:28 PM
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Location: Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, RJ 22080-101

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WEDDING IN BRAZIL -

July 12, 2008, 7:30 p.m., Rio de Janeiro, at the Igreja do Nossa Senhora do Bonsucesso, BERNARDO TAVARES and LUCIANA BABO were married in style!  What an extremely happy and gracious couple!  Friends and family filled every possible space in this historic Catholic church in the center of Rio de Janeiro.  The lights glowed softly with a golden sheen and the bride was brilliant in her mother's wedding gown, trailing several feet of lacy veil.  The church orchestra and wedding choir made music that was indeed heavenly.  There was not a dry eye as Lu walked by holding her father's hand, her eyes brimming with unshed tears.

One moment of humor occurred as the small cousin walked in alone after the wedding had started just asked (she'd been bribed with a promise of chocolate) holding a small statuary of the Virgin Mary.  Her lovely dress was actually a bit too long and she stumbled several times before solving the problem by wadding part of the skirt into her mouth!  As promised, chocolate was traded for the Virgin Mary and she promptly sat down on the stairs to eat it.  Sitting up close as we were, the wedding party had a chuckle over this. 

The lovely ceremony was both familiar and slightly different than here at home.  There was lots of hugging, many smiles, and joy at this marriage!  The party afterwards was 5 hours of nonstop dancing and music at Clube dos Cicaras, a private country club on an isle in a lagoon in Copacabana.   When the Samba band arrived Bernardo and Lu lifted joined hands up in the air  and lead the musicians into the ballroom with huge smiles.   Best wedding I've ever attended!  The happy couple will live Copacabana.

Posted in these Groups: Family & Home, Northwest, Travel
Topics: Wedding in Brazil
posted by mt2127 on Wednesday, July 30, 2008 at 04:08 PM
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THIS LAND IS YOUR LAND …

 

4th of July 2007 found me out in the blistering heat with a Brazilian high school student, Felipe Souza, and two visiting representatives of the German Foreign Office of EF Foundation for Foreign Study, Dana and Annette.  We had spent the better part of the day handing out flyers, talking to people on the street, and were now using the time before the BC Fireworks Display by chatting with everyone who would listen to us.  As the patriotic music started Dana looked over at me surprised that people were singing along.  “This doesn’t happen in Germany,” she told me.  As it turns out, the flags, the music, and the fireworks extravaganza were all new to both Germans and Brazilian.  “We only have fireworks on New Year’s Eve,” one or all three of them mentioned between ooohhhs and ahhhs and wild clapping going on around us.  I was asked, “Why are Americans so nationalistic?” by either Dana or Annette.  I asked them to look around at the people in the stands, their various ethnic backgrounds and languages being spoken around us.  It was simple to me, we’re proud of what we’ve accomplished as a nation incorporating people from all over the earth into one group.  Our freedoms and legal rights are safely guarded by constitutional law.  Variations of this  celebration were occurring all over the USA and for the same reasons – we are “One people under God, indivisible, with Liberty and Justice for all.” 

 

As I’ve welcomed foreign students into my home over the past 14 years, I always ask them what they think about America when they arrive.  I ask mostly the same questions as they are leaving.  This year, Fabian Taute from Germany admitted that he had some preconceived ideas and ‘prejudices’ about Americans before he got here.  As he passionately told me of what he had learned, the changes he had gone through, and how he felt now about our country, our government, and our people it reminded me that spending time with another culture, speaking the language of that culture, fosters understanding and acceptance.  As a multi-racial and multi-ethnic community and country, we should all realize that already and remember to pull together.  The concept that ‘Together we Stand and Divided we Fall’ has always been true.  If my memory is correct, the Latin translation of ‘E Pluribus Unum’ is ‘from many, One’.  That’s what it means to be a citizen of this great country – to come together from many and varied backgrounds, races, religious beliefs, and native languages and to become One Nation. 

 

I’m proud of my heritage, my brave ancestors and what they sacrificed to come here to this land.  I’m proud of what our country has achieved – and thankful to be an American.  My friend, Kalinka Rutberg, a Jewish Russian immigrant, summed it up nicely just the other day.  I had asked if she felt Americans, in particular Californians, were friendly, open, and tolerant of English learners.  She responded in the affirmative but went on to say that it just was not possible for those of us born here to completely appreciate our legal system, political system, and personal freedoms because we had never lived without them.  She brought tears to my eyes as she confirmed her appreciation to this country and it’s people.

Posted in the Family & Home interest group.
Topics: 4th of July, Independence Day, patriotic
posted by mt2127 on Thursday, June 19, 2008 at 09:07 PM
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Hey!  Check out the great videos about foreign exchange students on YouTube!  I know some of the adults and students on these videos personally - this is a great program!

 

Posted in the Family & Home interest group.
Topics: exchange student, host family, Travel, Education
posted by mt2127 on Tuesday, June 17, 2008 at 06:17 PM
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Excitement is rising!  In just a few weeks I'm off to Rio De Janeiro to be in a wedding.  I still can't believe how lucky I am to not only have this great opportunity to see Rio as well as Sao Paolo for three weeks, but to have such great relationships with two wonderful Brazilian kids! 

Ten years ago and for only 5 months I was host mom for Bernardo Tavares.  I can say unequivocally that I loved him the minute I met him!  Some people just click right away, and our five months time together was way too short.  However, he promised me that I could come to his wedding.  Little did I know that he meant I would be IN the wedding.  Aren't cultural differences great?  Apparently, in Brazil, instead of bridesmaids and groomsmen the Bride and Groom choose mature adults to be marriage advisers, 'padrones' or god-parents, for their marriage!  What a great idea.  I'm lucky enough to have a Brazilian son who still loves me even after 10 years.

As an extra bonus, I have another Brazilian son, Felipe Souza, (also completely wonderful) who was concerned about me traveling alone so he is going along as well.  We'll meet up in Sao Paolo, travel to Rio together, and the two boys will get to meet for the first time as well. 

Some people are blessed with family and others are blessed with choosing their family.  Being loved and appreciated by other people's children is a great joy in my life.

You can let Bernardo and Lu know you are happy about their July wedding by emailing lucibabo@yahoo.com.br

Thanks!  Margo 

mtyree@bak.rr.com

 

Posted in the Travel interest group.
Topics: foreign exchange, family, high school
posted by mt2127 on Tuesday, June 17, 2008 at 06:10 PM
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Host families are needed in Bakersfield and other areas of Southern California!  You and your family can break down cultural barriers by hosting a foreign exchange student in your home.  Volunteering to host an international student for an academic year or semester provides a rewarding experience for your entire family.  Children of all ages benefit from bonding with a student from another country, often learning a new language, developing a global perspective, and making a lifelong friend in the process. 

This is something that I've enjoyed doing for the past 13 years - often having two students in my home at the same time.  I can say that 27 people call me 'mom'.  I have loved visiting them in their own countries, going to their weddings, and enjoying their babies as they have moved on with their lives.  

Right now there are many excited students waiting for homes.  If you are interested or would like more information please contact me at mtyree@bak.rr.com or call EF Foundation For Foreign Study at 1-800-44-SHARE.  

Thanks!  Margo Tyree

I hope to hear from you!

Posted in the Family & Home interest group.
Topics: High School Year Abroad
posted by mt2127 on Friday, May 30, 2008 at 04:40 PM
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