Wednesday, December 7, 2011

"I Can't Leave Glendy" - Sharon's Perspective


Student sponsorship

In some areas of Guatemala it is not uncommon for adults to have only a first or second grade education as their families were not able to afford to send them to school when they were children.  The charitable organization we worked with in Guatemala is called Mayan Families.  They see need and figure out a way to help.  The organization was started by a woman from Australia who married a man from California.  Through the years they have adopted two beautiful daughters from Guatemala and now live down there full-time.  Most of their staff is composed of indigenous Maya with help from a number of interns and other young people, many from the United States, and other volunteers who go down to help when they can. I do not have the words to adequately describe the wonderful people who are on their staff.  One young man speaks three languages:  English, Spanish and Kakchiquel.  He grew up in a village a few miles from Panajachel on the beautiful Lake Atitlan, where Mayan Families is headquartered. 

In my opinion, one of the most important ways Mayan Families helps is by running schools for the indigenous people there in the “highlands.”  Through those schools they are touching many aspects of the lives of the students in addition to an education.  At school most of the children receive some good food, sometimes all that they will receive that day.  They brush their teeth at school.  This one activity has greatly improved the dental health of the children just from last year to this.  There is a team of dental volunteers who goes down to treat the students and they were very surprised in the improved dental health of the students this summer over last.  



Part of the way Mayan Families pays for the schools, from pre-schools through university, is through student sponsorships.  When someone selects a child for sponsorship, usually from the website that lists students in need of sponsorship, that child’s education is paid for that year by the sponsor.  Hopefully the sponsor will continue to sponsor for additional years, but if that is not possible, one year is the first step. The child receives shoes, a backpack and school supplies in addition to an education.

One morning we overheard Sharon, who helped start Mayan Families, mention to one of the other women in our group that she could indeed arrange for her to sponsor a child and there was a loud chorus of voices from the rest of the adults sitting in the van as we were preparing to head out to some activity.  We all wanted to sponsor a child!  As a result, we were presented with a list of names needing sponsorship, so we just picked from the list.   By afternoon when we returned from a very rainy day of building stoves our sponsored students were there waiting to meet us!  What a great time that was.  There were cameras snapping everywhere, and the little ones loved looking at our cameras to see a review of their images.  We were able to take the moms and kids over to the donations area and give each of them a filled backpack, clothing, shoes, blankets, etc.  What a fun time we had.  


My roommate on the trip, Christi, selected a little boy because she has a son back here in the US and because she thought Cesar might be in need of some of the special care that she wanted to give.  Watching Christi with Cesar was so heartwarming.  She was also able to donate to Cesar’s mother a quilt that had belonged to Christi’s mother.  









Then it was time for me to meet “my” Glendy!  I immediately fell in love with both Glendy and her mother, Rosa.  Rosa was able to go to school through the third grade and speaks a little Spanish, so that’s how we communicated.  Mayan Families had staff there to translate for us, but we did fine with smiles, hugs and a few words in Spanish.  We sadly had to say good bye that afternoon.  However, Mayan Families surprised us with bringing them back on Friday to join with the group for a lunch in a real restaurant.  



Matt & Angela’s family has sponsored a little girl for a while and they were taking her and her family out for lunch along with the three children being newly sponsored by Amherst Elementary School in Tennessee (sponsored through funds raised in their “dunk the principal” money).  So the rest of us joined them.  I don’t have any idea how many were at lunch that day, but there were 25 of our group plus all the sponsored students and their mothers and many of their siblings.  What a chaotic treat that meal was.  I imagine many of them had never eaten in a restaurant before.  It was touching to see how the moms all held back starting to eat.  I thought they were just being polite, so my friend sitting next to me suggested we start eating so they would start.  Later we realized they were holding back so they could take the chicken home to feed their family members who did not attend.  We sent many “doggie bags” home with them that day! 



It was so much fun to try to communicate, take pictures, enjoy the beautiful view of the lake from our open air restaurant built on a dock, play little games with the kids as we waited to be served, dance to the wonderful music, just generally share a special time together.  After getting to know Glendy and Rosa so well, it was very difficult to say good bye.  A few days later as my airplane lifted off at the Guatemala City airport a thought flashed through my head:  I can’t leave Glendy!  Now, how silly is that? !!  However, she is now often in my thoughts and sponsoring her schooling and helping her family with other needs is a joy to my heart.  I would recommend it highly to anyone who is interested.



Monday, November 21, 2011

Student Sponsorship: #1879 Jazmin Nohemi



Jazmin is a sweetheart!  They were one of the families that we gave a food basket to during the the service trip.  We also spent an afternoon with her, along with taking her family to lunch one afternoon.  It was probably the first time they had been in a restaurant - and there was no wasted food!  Jazmin would like to have the chance at continuing her education!


Jazmin Nohemi attends the Mayan Families pre-school program in San Andres.

She lives in San Andres Semebetaj with her mother, Angelica (30yrs old).


The father has abandoned the family to live with another woman. He does not support the family. 








Jazmin has three brothers and 1 sister.
They are:

    Marco Josue Aaron (student #850) was born on April 26th, 2001. He is in 4th grade in 2011.
    Pablo Timoteo (student #1404) is 6 years old. His birthday is October 5th. He is in kindergarten.
    David is 4yrs old. He is not in school yet. David has a murmur in his heart and is waiting to have more medical treatment.
    A sister born in April 2010.


Angelina weaves belts and traditional blouses and earns $16 US per week.

The money that she earns is not enough to cover all her costs.

The family does not have enough to eat. 
They children are in need of clothing and shoes.

They live in Angelina's mother's home.

The house is made of cement block.

The roof is tin sheeting.

The floor is cement.

The house has three rooms and a kitchen.
Angelina has two rooms in the house.

They have an onil stove that Mayan Families gave them.

They have a pila.


They have water connected and pay $0.50 cents US per month.

They are paying $2 US for trash collection.

They have two chairs.

They  have a table.

They have two beds.

One has a mattress and the other has bare boards.

They have one closet. 


They have electricity connected and pay $8 US per month.

Student Sponsorship: #1882 Sebastian


Sebastian is a special little boy.  His smile can light up the room, and I will always remember how excited he was to get a new pair of underwear!  It is clear his mother cares for him...she has a "caring, calmness" about her that you could "feel."  HIs mother is trying her best to work, and I think it is special that she is a teacher (when she can find work...). 
 
Sebastian is 5 yrs old. His birthdate is August 18, 2007.
Sebastian lives with his mother, Carmen (dob. June 25th, 1980) in San Andres.  Sebastian attends the Mayan Families/Mission Guatemala Pre-school in San Andres.
The father left before Sebastian was born. He does not support Sebastian nor does he visit him.
Sebastian has one sister, Esmeralda , 6yrs old.  dob. May 23, 2005.
She is in kindergarten in 2011.
The mother is a teacher and gives classes to teach reading and writing to adults.
She earns $50 US per week.
The work she has is only for short term contracts... she gets 3 months period at a time. When the contract finishes she works washing clothes by hand in private houses.
They own the house they live in, they are still paying it off to the bank.  Carmen pays $64 US per month for the loan...she has two more years to pay it off.
It has three rooms and a kitchen. It is made of cement block.
The roof is tin.
The floor is cement.
They have a wood burning stove.
They do not have a water filter.
They do not have a pila...a 2 sided sink. To wash her clothes, she takes them to her mother’s house and uses the pila there.
They have electricity connected and pay $8 US per month.
They do not have water connected. Carmen has to carry water from her mother’s house.
They have four chairs and two small tables.
They have one closet and one bed with a mattress that they all share.

Student Sponsorship: #1757 Berta Paola


Our group spent time with Berta and her mother this summer.  They have faced such adversity, but hopefully she will receive the gift of an education...providing more choices in life.  Berta looks so happy in her new traditional clothes that were donated to her!





Berta Paola was born on January 20th, 2006.
Berta is in the Mayan Families/Mission Guatemala pre-school in San Andres in 2011.
She lives in San Andres with her father, Juan, 41yrs old (dob. April 5th, 1969) and her mother, Maria, 44yrs old (dob. Dec. 4th, 1966).
Berta has five brothers and one sister.
 They are:

  • ·      Domingo is 18yrs old. (dob. July 18, 1992). He went to school till 7th grade and now works as a cleaner in a hotel. He earns $23 US per week.

  • ·      Elias is 17yrs old. (dob. May 23rd, 1994) . He went to school till 6th grade. He is unemployed right now but he collects firewood to sell and also for the home. He earns $4 US on the days when he is able to sell the firewood.

  • ·      Jeremias is 13yrs old. (dob. August 5th, 1997). He is in 3rd grade.

  • ·      Noe is 10yrs old. (dob. May 29th , 2000). He is in 3rd grade.

  • ·      Floridalma is 8yrs old. (dob. June 25th, 2002) . She is in 2nd grade.

  • ·      Eliseo is 6yrs old. (dob. Sept. 9th, 2004). He is in kindergarten.



The father works as a builders assistant. He earns $26 US per week.
He did not have the opportunity to go to school . He does not know how to read or write.

The mother works collecting firewood to sell and earns $7 US per week.
She did not have the chance to go to school. She does not know how to read or write.


They are living in a tent given to them by Shelterbox.  Their village was evacuated during Tropical Storm Agatha in 2010.  They are not allowed to return to their village. It is a permanent evacuation. The land has been greatly damaged by mudslides and it is unsafe to live there.

The govt. is eventually going to give them land so that they can build a house.


The father built a kitchen made of tin sheeting and built a block stove for his wife to cook over.


They do not have a water filter.

They do not have beds, they sleep on mattresses on the floor.

They have a small closet.
They have three chairs and one table.


They have electricity connected and the govt. is paying.

They have one toilet and one shower they are sharing with 21 families.

They have two sinks to wash their clothes and they are sharing these sinks with the 21 families also.

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Linda's 1st Day of Service

Linda's first of many........
My first day "On the Job" so to speak was by far one of the toughest days of my life.  



It was Monday and we met that morning, then went to our first preschool to work. It was all sooo new to me.  So many little faces all cautiously curious about us. As we begin our morning with them the faces begin to smile, and then laugh.  We had fun.  Oh how rewarding, just to see how thankful they were to play with the neat toys we brought. To watch the excitement as they got their previously worn shoes (which to them they were new), to watch them cradle their clothes and new toothbrush was heartwarming. 





















BUT...... on this day I was also given the opportunity to work in the elderly program.  My emotions took an all time low.  We cut up veggies in preparation to the meal we were to deliver them.  Oh yeah, try doing that with a huge butcher knife.  I hope we can get them some potato peelers.  As we begin to deliver these small bowls of soup, I began to see things that my words could never be able to adequately describe.  We went into homes that were dirt floors, no electricity, no running water,  they had almost nothing to speak of.  What they did have was mostly damp and muddy (we were there in the rainy season).   I had such a struggle going on in my heart.  We have sooo much here in the USA.  I obviously had been taking everything in my life sooo for granted.   I saw first hand what poor was that day.   I saw old people with bed sores the size of tennis balls still try to smile and say thank you.  These people are so appreciative of the simplest things.  I had many "firsts" on my trip to Guatemala, I only hope they are not my last.