Hi everyone!
We had a long day yesterday. We went to one of the communities where
there are some summer interns called Los Espinos. It was great to see a
different rural community then the one I am living in and meet the
people and hear about the work they are doing. In this community there
are people working to educate people about different types of garbage
and help them sort garbage by organic waste and nonorganic waste which
is buried in the ground every three months instead of left on the
ground. There is no trash removal in the campo. This community was also
very clean. There were beautiful flowers at one of the houses. People
had started a small green house and they have hopes to plant several
thousand trees. They also have a worm farm to produce fertilizer for
their community garden. They are working to get funds to repair the
water project and keep it out of government hands. It would be alot
more expensive for them to pay the government for water use then the
community. In the community where I am living, they are finshing up a
two year long water project which puts pipes under ground and would
allow all of the communities to have water from faucets spread
throughout all year round. Right now they only having running water
during the rainy season which we are in now. All of the work is
accomplished by voluntary labor of the community. One of the things
that I am having a hard time realizing is that the government actually
does very little for most of the people of the country. The
organizations in the community in which I live have gotten all of their
funding from foreign governments and people. The women's organization
and the Defensoras Populares (women working agnst DV) are constantly
coming up agst the issue of not having funding to accomplish their
goals such as providng food and some economic reources to women who are
experiencing domestic violence. Despite these difficulties at least 7
women show up every week to get training on how to respond to issues of
DV in thier community and big topics are discussed such as how the
issue isn't just one of the particular family but of the society and
that it is a smaller replica of the government which is run by a party
that includes a few rich families and doesn{'t provide the most basic
services for the majority of it's people such as sufficent jobs,
education and health care. Another thing I am learning about in my
community is the civil war of the 1980's and 1990's. Where I live is
land that was taken from rich landowners and given to people who had
worked the land before the war. Most of the people living here fought
or had family who fought as revolutionaries during the war and many
were killed by the government army. I am proud of my ability to keep up
in Spanish and to ask questions when I don't understand something.
The people here are very welcoming and glad to have me in their
presence. Some of the harder things to deal with are bugs in the
outhouses, trash on the ground everywhere, mosquitoe bites and beans
and tortillas all of the time but the sense of international
community and understanding I am helping to build here makes all of the
smaller inconveniences well worth it. I will email again soon. Debbie