During a break in school the other day, I went for a walk
around the block in a direction I hadn’t yet explored. A volunteer who was in
town staying with my family for the week advised always making yourself known
to the workers at the local post office where you might receive mail someday.
Post office workers here can be pretty mean and sometimes rude, I was told, but
it’s still a good idea for them to know who you are.
So I came to the pocht
(that’s phoenetic, as my current keyboard doesn’t contain some of the
letters of Azerbaijan’s alphabet), and
popped inside. There is a bulletin board and a counter, with several women
working behind the glass barrier. I introduced myself as an American (man amerikaliyam) and then got lost in a
pantomime, trying to find out if they had any boxes for mailing packages. No,
they have no boxes. So I thanked them and went back on my merry way around the
block. Around the corner I discovered a largish grocery store with a LOT of
food labeled in Russian and, naturally, Philadelphia cream cheese. Because you
never know.
Later in the day, another couple of trainees (talimchilar) wanted to go down and
mail a letter to the states, so I went with them. While one was working on the
letter and I was busily trying to decipher the items on the bulletin board, the
one of us with the most language proficiency was being addressed by one of the
workers. Unexpectedly, I hear, “Leigh, can you help?” So I go over and try to
understand what this very gregarious, friendly woman is saying in rapid
Azerbaijani. I think I hear her ask
for my name, so I give it to her, but she apparently thinks it should have more
syllables or something, because she doesn’t recognize it as a name. As she
continues to try to get her point across and I continue to look more
bewildered, suddenly, out of her mouth pops, “Wie hiesst du?” My mind goes
instantly back to high school, where I studied German for years….I’m sorry, but
are you really speaking German?? “Sprechen Sie Deutsch??” She laughs and
reintroduces herself, at which point I repeat my name and we all introduce
ourselves and briefly tell her why we’re there.
As we leave the pocht, laughter follows us out the door.
This is a good thing…I have a package to mail this weekend and I could use some
sympathetic patience from them when I go back.
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