Thursday 24 November 2011

To survive high school

For those of you who are year 8 and starting high school next year, it will be a big leap. In a sense, at primary school you are the big fish in the small pond, but next year in year 9 you will be the small fish in the ocean. High school in New Zealand is different to those you may have seen in cartoons.

Because there's no school bully who does wedgies noggies or swirlies. And there are no nerds. Unless that's how some dumb people see you as. At AC, not many use a locker to keep their stuff safe. most of us (including me) carry our stuff round in our bags. Don't worry, high school isn't really any different from primary school, except for the fact that every body will seem allot taller. (And rounder in some cases).

At AC, they are embracive of the Maori culture. That would explain the Marae. That also explains the Whanau house arrangement. In primary school, you may have had red house, yellow house etc. The same thing applies in AC. Except, the house are called Whanau. In AC there are 5 Whanaus: Kaitaataki (yellow), Whaianga (red, and the best because I'm in it), Tirohanga (blue), Kaitoro (green) and Auaha (purple). They all have there own meanings but I don't know them.

On your first day at AC, don't make the silly mistake that me and a few others did and bring every one of your books. Because you won't be doing anything with them for a week. Instead, just brig a refill pad and a pen. Of all your items of stationary, there is one book in particular that you just simply can't lose: your diary. It's basically a record of your learning and passport around the school. No diary, no trip to the toilet!

Apart from that, life at AC is usually pretty strait forward. Just do what you are told and you'll be fine.







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Friday 18 November 2011

Thankyou letter to Miss Gutschlag

18th November 2011,


505 Alfriston Road
Manurewa
Auckland


Dear Miss Gutschlag,
                                    I wish to thank you for being such a great Social Studies teacher this year. I found you really approachable when I first met you and you seemed to be laid back and relaxed. Though the work was easy and I didn't learn a great deal, what I did learn, I enjoyed.  It was interesting learning about Malawi and the poverty topic. The poverty vortex and the 'rich north poor south devide' was all new to me.

I also liked the fact that you didn't blow a gasket each lesson, even though you were by my standards entitled to. Being able to put up with the  shenanigans of certain people over and over again took some feat! I don't know why you just didn't kick them out.

Anyway, I hope that you stay at AC next year. I'm sure that those crack-pots would have calmed down  by then and will not be disruptive - and some learning to take place for a change. Hopefully I will learn something more. I'm sure I will.

Yours sincerely,

Jacob Benniks






Saturday 5 November 2011

The Memorial

" Keep doing this in remembrance of me." (Luke 22:19)
The Memorial is a commemoration of Jesus Christ's death, celebrated by Jehovah's Witnesses between mid March and the beginning of April each year. It is the only event that the Bible commands Christians to celebrate. Worldwide attendance for 2010 was 18.7 million in 236 countries!  

The date of celebration varies from year to year because at the time of Jesus' death, the Jewish lunar calendar was used - not the Gregorian calendar in use today. The actual date of his death on the Jewish calendar was Nisan 14th which this year was 17th April (in 2012 it will be April 5th). The date is determined by the day in that month nearest the full moon.

A month prior to the Memorial, we begin a public invitation campaign to invite as many people as possible to attend (everybody is welcome to attend.)

The Memorial always begins after sundown, which coincides with the Jewish calendar (their day began at sundown). The venue is usually a Kingdom Hall of Jehovah's Witnesses (church), where each individual congregation gathers to celebrate the Memorial. (Congregations located relatively close together share Kingdom Halls, but for the Memorial celebration to accommodate the larger attendance, sometimes a community hall is hired.)

While it is a celebration with wine, the  Memorial isn't celebrated with partying like is so often seen in other celebrations. Rather, it is celebrated in a calm, respectful way, following the same pattern set by Jesus. First, a relevant song is sung and an opening prayer is offered. Second, a Bible-based talk is given about  when and why Jesus held the first Memorial with his disciples on the night before his death. (This is commonly known as the Lord's Supper.) Third, a prayer is given. Fourth, the bread representing Jesus' body is passed around the entire congregation. Similar to passover bread, this is no ordinary bread. It is made without any leaven or yeast because the  Bible often uses the term leaven as a symbol of sin or corruption - certainly not appropriate for a celebration of God's own son! Fifth, another prayer is given. Sixth, the wine symbolising Jesus' blood. But just not any wine will do. The  red wine must be pure and not fortified (Port or sherry, etc) wine representing Jesus' sinless blood. The wine is also passed around the entire congregation. Finally, a song is sung and a prayer is offered to conclude.

Lots do wonder though: Why are we celebrating a death? Because in doing so, Jesus paid with his life for what Adam had lost in the Garden of Eden. What this means for us is that it gives each and everyone of us the prospect of gaining everlasting life here on earth, as was God's original purpose for mankind.    

So if next April you get a knock on the door and someone hands you an invitation to the Memorial celebration in your area, why not come along and check it out?
A Memorial Celebration.