This is some of what I know so far:
- I will spend 11 weeks of pre-service training in Madaba, Jordan, a touristy city southwest of Amman. Madaba is a fairly "modern" city, has a large Christian population, and many tourists.
- Training will be intense, focusing on language, cross-cultural communication and adaptation, development issues, current events, health and safety, and the technical skills pertinent to teaching English and working in primary schools.
- I will live with a host family throughout training.
- I will be assigned to my permanent site towards the end of training (January 2013) where I will likely live in my own apartment.
- Jordan is currently the only Peace Corps program in the Middle East
- Current PCVs that were stationed close to the Syrian border have since been relocated. The Peace Corps makes safety and security a huge priority- particularly right now. They relocated volunteers preemptively. (I've listed some links about the Syrian conflict at the end)
- There have been some protests in Jordan after the Innocence of Muhammad video went viral, but have been mostly non-violent Timeline: Protests over anti-Islam video (Aljazeera)
- In general, Jordanians are friendly and hospitable to Westerners. Many urban Jordanians were educated in the West and speak excellent English. Some will likely voice criticism of American policy in the Middle East (sure to be a topic of interest following the results of November 12th...), but individual Americans are generally well-liked and treated respectfully.
That being said, the single most common piece of advice I get from returned Peace Corps Volunteers? Expect the unexpected.
Links:
Syria Uprising Timeline - NY times
30,000 Syrian refugees in Jordan
Obama vs Romney on Middle East
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