Piensa local, Actúa global. Conozca Más

Sunday, May 29, 2011

Whirlwind update of the past month!


Things have been busy out here in Gracias! I can’t believe May has come and gone… before I know it, it will be August and I will be boarding a plane in San Pedro on my way to BOSTON!!!! Yay!!!!

What have I been up to? Good question! We finished up Yo Merezco/Yo Tambien Merezco this past week with the 5th and 6th graders at one of the bilingual schools. It’s such a great program, I can’t wait to start it with another group, but I might hold off a little bit so I don’t over-do it. To re-cap, incase you are a new reader- it is an abstinence based sex-ed/self-esteem class for pre-adolescents, that is separated into a girl’s manual and a boy’s manual. I think what struck me the most about facilitating this class was when we got to the menstruation chapter with the girls- they were SO beyond thrilled to ask all the “is it normal when…” questions because they’ve never had the opportunity to talk about things like that before.

My TEAM (Teaching English and Methodology) class started with a group of 19 teachers….. the Peace Corps has partnered with the Secretary of Education of Honduras to create this course (so far 3 levels have been elaborated) to improve basic English education and methodology in the primary schools. The teachers who enroll in the course are suppose to teach English at least once a week, implementing the new methodology they learn. Why should they been teaching English, you ask? Is it that important? Aren’t there more important things they should be focusing on? Well… yes, of course, in a country where the vast majority misspell common words (llegar—yegar; quiero—kiero; merezco—meresco… I could go on and on) it seems wasteful to put so much energy into teaching an entirely different language. BUT, teachers are mandated by the government to teach English, and they don’t receive any training or education in the subject. Essentially they are teaching poor English via rote memorization, and the students aren’t learning. The Secretary of Education approached Peace Corps Youth Development program a few years ago asking for help, and that’s how TEAM started! I agree that it shouldn’t be a priority given other more urgent needs that communities face in Honduras, BUT given the circumstances, I am happy to do it. I loved the English class I gave when I first got here, to the youth center volunteers, and have been itching to get TEAM started. And so far, my students (the teachers) LOVE it! The methodology is dynamic and participative, two things they are not use to. I was wrapping up class on Friday and had a song planned to teach them, but it was almost the end of the class so I doubted anyone would want to stick around to sing it, but I asked them, and they all stayed, and we sang this color song about 10 times!

We are still brushing teeth, reading stories and learning how to read at IHNFA. As of late, I have been doing a lot of number identification games with them…. You have to do something when 5 and 6 year olds can’t distinguish number 1 from number 4. This coming week I will finally be giving toothbrushes to the three kinder teachers nextdoor. IHNFA supposedly serves 50 kids but on any given day, by the afternoon when I do my colgate class, there are between 10 and 20. All of the kids have their preschool classes at this kinder that is right there, along with 50 other kids who are not enrolled at IHNFA. I will set up each of the three teachers with toothbrushes so they can do the colgate program in the morning, and the kids that also go to IHNFA will brush twice a day.

Earlier this month we had our last Youth Development in-service training in a program called Joven a Joven (youth to youth) which is a course for high school kids about job orientation, figuring out skills and aptitudes, how to prepare for an interview, writing a resume and a cover page, etc. It’s a really detailed, well put-together program but the prep work is intensive. The counterpart that came with me is doing an internship right now with World Vision and she wants to start soon, so we can complete the entire course during the time of her internship…. Hopefully we will start planning this coming week... OH! And during the workshop we made a music video to a song that fellow volunteer Melissa wrote about using condoms and preventing AIDS! Once it is done being edited I will be sure to share it. AND on the last day of the workshop, the hotel gave us a CAKE (photographed here). How sweet!


I also recently set up another blog to use as part of the World Wise School program, which is a peace corps program that sets up volunteers with classrooms in the states. I'll be writing to my sister's special ed class! The year is almost over but she runs a summer program too, so it will carry over. I'm sharing the link to that blog on this blog, but not the other way around :) We haven't officially started but G said this week she'd introduce them to it.
http://www.wws-lisa-pchonduras.blogspot.com/

An update on safety and security in Honduras….. 6 volunteers are being evacuated from their sites and moved to new ones due to a rapid increase in random/intense violence in a certain area of the country. Volunteers living in and right around this certain city will officially have new homes by this Friday. YIKES! I wish them all the best, I can’t imagine what it would be like to move to a new site and integrate into a new community so far into your service. Please keep these volunteers in your thoughts. (Pictured to the left is me with Juan Carlos our safety and security officer).

Also, ex-president Mel Zelaya, who was ousted in the coup in 2009 and has been hiding out in the DR, came back into Honduras this weekend.... I was expecting to hear horror stories about what happened in the streets of Tegucigalpa, but so far everything's tranquilo. He has a LOT of supporters, but also what seems to be an equal number of "enemies" (for lack of a better word).

Random story of the week: I was walking down the street and I hear someone shout something in English… I keep walking, assuming it was someone being rude, saying gross things to me in broken English (I am not being bitter, it is literally just part of a typical day). But then I realize the English is not broken so I turn around. It was a group of young men outside one of the Evangelical churches, on a missionary trip from the states. They come down once/twice a year and always partner with the same congregation. They were so nice, and they all gathered around me and prayed for my safety and well-being (and then they gave me a bible in Spanish). It was so kind of them, I nearly cried.

Annnnd of course, more goats :)

Thats all for now,
lots of hugs from Honduras,
love, lisa

Friday, May 27, 2011

Comments on Boston Globe's Article

The Boston Globe recently published an article about the Peace Corps, questioning it’s validity and suggesting reforms and modifications to the organization as a whole. Before I start voicing my own opinions about the claims made, I want to reiterate the disclaimer on the right of my blog…. These, in NO WAY reflect the views of the United States Peace Corps nor the government nor Honduras, just ME! Cheque.

I am also voicing my opinions as a reflection of my experience thus far from just one of the 77 current Peace Corps posts worldwide. They are, in essence, biased.

The article, in case you're interested:
http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/ideas/articles/2011/05/15/the_peace_corps_what_is_it_for/?page=full



#1.”The Peace Corps — an agency with a budget that reached $400 million in 2010 and which sends nearly 9,000 volunteers into risky environments every year — may no longer have a real purpose.”
…………… The budget might seem like a lot, but the same amount of money goes towards the Peace Corps annually than to the army’s marching band. Ademas, in its 50 year history, less money has gone towards the Peace Corps than the US military receives in one fiscal year. Risky environments, that’s a valid point.

#2. “Today, more than one-third of volunteers quit before their two-year terms expire, according to internal agency documents obtained by the authors of the memo.”…… Please take this statistic with a grain of salt… “quit” can mean so many different things in regards to early termination of your service. One of your parents gets diagnosed with cancer, you are part of a bus assault or other nasty security incident, a close friend is sexually assaulted and it hits too close to home, no one in your community will work with you despite all your efforts….. so many things can happen…. I don’t like to use the word “quit” in Peace Corps….

#3. “Why should the American taxpayer in a time of horrendous budget cuts pay for these college grads to have a two-year vacation in a foreign land?” asked Paula Hirschoff, a two-time Peace Corps volunteer who along with her husband, Chuck Ludlam, authored the critical memo. “Why? It doesn’t make sense.”….. HOLD UP. I am sorry that this persons experience resembled a two year vacation but let me tell you straight from the field, nothing about this job is even remotely related to a two year vacation! I am sure that for some volunteers, living conditions are favorable and work minimal, but that is the vast minority. And about the budget cuts, refer to my comments in point #1. And, budget cuts are greatly affecting Peace Corps as well as it is affecting other organizations. We can certainly feel it in Honduras, as we just went from 6 projects down to 4.

#4. “But the problem, as a chorus of critics has been pointing out, is that the agency has never been structured to do development effectively.” …… this could go either way. It’s an ongoing struggle, but in my post at least, there is an extremely strong emphasis on sustainability- whether it’s working or not is another question.

#5. “They also wonder whether the Peace Corps should abandon what they call a “go it alone” policy, and start collaborating with other big aid organizations. Combining volunteers’ knowledge of individual communities with the resources and institutional memory of these larger organizations could be, they suggest, a recipe for building a more valuable Peace Corps.” …. YES! Not for every volunteer but at least for some… what powerful resources!

#6. “That lofty sense of virtue devoid of real mission strikes a lot of people as pretty fuzzy for an organization that is arguing for an even bigger budget and an increase in volunteer numbers.” ……. I wouldn’t go as far as to say “devoid of real mission.” There are clear goals for the organization as a whole, but it IS a diverse experience. That doesn’t have to make it “fuzzy.” And about the budget, again, refer to #1. In comparison to what our government spends on other things each year, even if the very least Peace Corps does is strengthen foreign relations (which is as important now as it was in 1961), I believe it’s money well spent.

#7. “What critics including Strauss want to see, before any expansion, is for the Peace Corps to tackle its structural problems.”……. I think reforming the structure of the organization as a whole is necessary, and agree that increasing the number of volunteers isn’t the best idea. Fewer volunteers and more individualized training is probably the smartest way to go.

#8. “They wonder if all this talk of reform and change overlooks what is most central about the agency, that it allows Americans to interact with the world. This simple notion, they say, is what has made for the resilience of the Peace Corps over the decades.”….. The Peace Corps has lasted 50 years, and has only grown stronger in recent years. Something’s working. I believe reforms are necessary, but I also love the diversity within the Peace Corps community. I’d hate to see it change drastically, but I think reducing the over all number of volunteers and focusing in on more specific projects might improve sustainability and work more towards international development. At the same time…. Would those changes take away from uniqueness of the organization as a whole? I don’t know.

Closing Remarks: Like any program as extensive as this one, modifying and reorganizing the structure every so often is necessary. With that being said, part of what makes this organization so unique is its diversity. I’d love to see structural changes within reason, but I’d hate for the initial idea of Peace Corps, helping/supporting through true understanding, to be lost. When you put the PC’s budget into perspective, it’s nothing, and it’s getting cut as we speak, so I just might scream if I hear/read one more complaint about the money being spent on this alleged fuzzy organization. Worry not, fiscally conservative tax payers, I assure you, you are not paying for anyone’s 2 year vacation filled with cockroaches, bucket baths, cat-calls, unpaved roads, minimal resources, and the like. You are helping to support motivated, be it idealistic, professionals (not all “recent college grads”) integrate into foreign cultures, making them better able to aid host country nationals in developing themselves. You are helping strengthen the ties between our country and other countries. You are giving people hope. Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn’t, but that’s life, and it is true of all things. That doesn’t mean we shouldn’t try.

Monday, May 9, 2011

The one where I make a cheesy video...

I finally put some of my favorite pictures together to make a video! These are the kids I work with at IHNFA…. Sorry it’s super cheesy, but, what are you gonna do! Also, I think it can only be viewed in the US (sorry everyone in Honduras!)... there was some technical glitch that I think came about from a questionable audio source... I haven't quite gotten to the bottom of it yet!





To elaborate a bit more on IHNFA (Instituto Hondureno de la Ninez y la Familia), it is a government “funded” organization catering to families living in extreme poverty, and families with working mothers. Kids between the ages of 1 and 7 come and get three meals a day. There aren’t too many centers, but they are sprinkled around the country, mostly in the bigger cities. The idea, in essence, is brilliant, right? Well… it’s not quite as simple, as the “funding” for IHNFA (at least the one I work at) is minimal, barely enough to maintain the building.

At my IHNFA, since my arrival, I have been trying to involve the staff in programs that hopefully they will continue after I complete my service. We’ve done/are currently doing Colgate (dental hygiene class), story hour, Yo Se Leer (early literacy tutoring), classroom management techniques, arts/crafts, and various other less formal recreational/educational activities.

It’s been a really hard placement, and I find myself constantly re-explaining my role and reminding the staff that we need to work together to make things sustainable. But, I also feel that I’ve made great strides in this since September. And in the end, even if my co-workers don’t end up following through the way I’d like them to, that’s the beauty of the Youth Development project: We work directly with the kids too! So… regardless of project sustainability, if one child remembers one thing I’ve taught them, and applies it to his/her future, I’ve had success as a volunteer.


Another perk of getting to work WITH them directly is that I have been able to see them all progress in the 9 months that I've been here, as far as being able to hold a pencil correctly, knowing what to do with a crayon, asking questions about a story we are reading rather than looking like a deer in headlights, discovering sparkles! I am so proud of them!

I love all of the IHNFA kids dearly… the majority of the kids come from houses with no/minimal walls, sleep on the floor, or (better? worse?) in the same bed as their mother and 3-4 siblings, aren’t kept clean, and are more or less neglected at home. This leads to either overly aggressive or extremely timid behaviors, although I have seen a lot of progress in the kids that come regularly, at least the timid ones.,,. Though this is the majority, there are kids who come because their mothers go to work. It’s wonderful to see these moms come to pick up their children after work and take them home…. The other side is heartbreaking, seeing the kids leaving by themselves after the last meal is served, to walk alone to wherever it is that they live. Everyday, one 5 year old boy walks to and from IHNFA, holding his one year old brother’s hand (at the end of the day he sometimes carries his little brother because he's half-asleep)…. He and his brother aren’t enrolled because their mom works…. They are enrolled because they live in poverty… So where is mom? dad?


Friday, April 29, 2011

Semana Santa and a Reflection After 10 Months in Honduras

Semana Santa (Holy Week) is a big to do all over the country- no one works, no one goes to school, basically Honduras shuts down and people go to the beach, go visit their families, or stay in town and go to church. By the end of the week, public transportation even shuts down! I went and spent the week in the city of Comayagua with 14 other of the 17 youthies from my training group. I was there all week. One group rotated out while another group rotated in before the busses stopped running. It was a lovely week, and included a trip to a gorgeous waterfall, a day lounging at a pool, an interesting trip to a Honduran “waterpark”, the biggest baleada in the Central America, a night of dancing, and some pretty crazy religious processions throughout the city.

Comayagua is known for its impressive display of “alfombras” (“rugs” made out of sawdust) that people make all through the night before Good Friday. Then, the religious procession walks right over them, essentially destroying any remaining evidence of the hard work people put into creating such awesome works of art. It was quite the event!

My friend and I also got our hair braided at a Garifuna salon! I got beads in all of my braids! That was quite the event too, as my friend is part African-American, she fit in pretty well, but yours truly was the whitest person in that room, but I think the ladies doing hair enjoyed our company very much- they let me pick out all the beads to put in my hair! Having a head full of braids was fun…. But I finally took them out so I could wash my hair after a close call lice incident at work. The day after I took them out I was walking down the street and a woman I’ve never seen comes out of her house and says “Y las trensitas???” (And the little braids????)…. I guess I really do stand out of people I don’t know keep themselves up to date on my latest hairstyles. Even “big” towns here are smaller than you can imagine.

Needless to say, it was a perfect week, and I am so grateful for all the wonderful friendships I've made among the volunteer community- they are my support system in country, and I couldn't have asked for more awesome companer@s.

Next week I’ve got an E-Zone coordinators meeting! What is E-Zone? Emergency Zone. Whenever there is an emergency (weather related, strike/protest/civil unrest related, safety related) all volunteers are separated into different “E-Zone’s” depending on their geographic location. My site mate who finished her service a few months ago was the E-Zone coordinator out in my area, and I am taking over for her! I will be the first one to get important safety and security information, and will be responsible for relaying the information to volunteers nearby. Wooo!

As far as work in Gracias goes, we are halfway through our Yo Merezco/Yo Tambien Merezco classes and will be looking into finding other groups to work with and implement the same program. We’ve been painting the recreation area at IHNFA all week, where we are also continuing with Colgate and Story Hour. The kids are still fascinated by the whole “brushing your teeth” phenomenon.

I am giving the English class for teachers another try; I had an introduction/sign up session planned in March, but no one showed up because it was the same day they went on their 5 week strike. We’ll see who shows up this Tuesday! I also know the counterpart that came with me to the math/business workshop is eager to start something, but we’ll see if I can find time.

It might not seem like I have a lot on my plate, but when you add in preparation time, working with Honduran counterparts (everything seems to take twice as long), still trying to focus at least a little bit on community integration (I go hang out with a little boy and his grandmother 3-4 afternoons a week to help him with his homework), trying to coordinate my exercise schedule around the cat-call schedule, AND the fact that I am in a country where you really should return home before dark for your own safety… well… It’s a lot! But I’m glad to keep busy. It puts missing life back in the states (where miraculously there is always running water, and for the most part giant gross bugs stay where they belong OUTSIDE) on the back burner, and forces you to focus on the here and now.

I’m only here for 2 years (only?!) I’d hate to finish my service feeling like I’ve wasted my time. Sometimes projects won’t work out or won’t be sustainable, but giving them a shot goes a long way, even if all you do is remind host country nationals that not all US citizens are power-hungry capitalists who love war and hate immigrants (just some of the many stereotypes we’ve been given). That’s 33.3% of this job.

I’ve been in Honduras just over 10 months now. Sometimes it feels like I just got here, and I still am taken aback by the cat calls, shocked by the state that people’s teeth are in, and constantly tripping on the same streets I walk down everyday. Other times I feel like I’ve been here forever, that the kids I work with are like my own, of course there’s no water to shower with, and that its normal to carry a whistle with me whenever I travel.

I can’t wait to see how the next 16 months go…. But to sum up the past ten months, I will say that now I truly understand the Peace Corps slogan (“The toughest job you’ll ever love.”)

Hope those who celebrate had a nice Easter, and to three of my dearest friends, Sarah, Stef and Jen, I hope you had amazing 23rd birthdays!

I love and miss you all MUCHISIMO!

Un Abrazo Fuerte,

Lisa

Saturday, April 16, 2011

The One With the Screaming Goat

The strike ended!!!! But then it started back up, but ended again… And now it’s Semana Santa (Holy Week), which means we won’t know for another week whether or not classes have started back up, or if they will continue to be on hiatus until the government and the teachers can reach some sort of agreement.

Though it certainly has it’s challenges, these are the times when I am thankful to have a bigger site, as I was able to start both Yo Merezco and Yo Tambien Merezco with one of the private schools. These are the two programs that I went to trainings for with members from my community (courses for 10-12 year olds about abstinence, self-esteem, making good decisions, and other topics of similar nature). Both of the counterparts that came to the trainings with me have (so far) followed through with the implementation. I am coordinating the program, both the girls class and the boys class, supervising my counterparts, and also co-facilitating the girls class with my female counterpart. We have combined the fifth and sixth graders from the school to make one class with 18 girls (Yo Merezco) and one class with 10 boys (Yo Tambien Merezco). It’s much more difficult to work with private schools than public schools because they are more stingy with the amount of class time they want to give up (naturally), so we also condensed/combined some topics and are doing the program in half the sessions that the class normally takes. I also had to send home quite a detailed letter to all the parents explaining what exactly we would be talking about…the school has a religious affiliation, so we anticipated some concerns about the nature of the course (abstinence, reproduction, puberty, etc), but so far no complaints!

Colgate continues, although I have some doubts that when I’m not there, no one on staff is held accountable for making sure the kids brush (oddly enough, there is no Spanish translation for the word accountable). I understand that its chaotic to get a group of rowdy preschoolers together to brush their teeth every day (BELIEVE ME I KNOW!), but that’s what you have to do to form the habit. I know my counterparts there had explained to me how they do it when I’m not there, they stay inside and give each kid their brush and wait for them to come back and return them, which is great! Yeah, not ideal supervision, but it’s something, and if it works for them, I am happy. When I’m there I like to do it in a big circle and sing and dance. It’s ok if they don’t want to sing and dance (I usually make a bigger deal out of it because when I brush with them in coincides with a lesson)…I’m not offended. I just hope that these past two weeks, as I have been out of site at a training and with medical appointments, that the poor little toothbrushes weren’t forgotten. OH! and the last class before I left for the training, we had a special guest interrupt us... A SCREAMING GOAT! Only in Honduras...


The training we had was our 3rd of 5 Youth Development In-Service Trainings, for Business Fundamentals and Improving Math Methodology. Needless to say, I was not thrilled with the topic…. BUT my counterpart was super excited about everything, and I think he is ready to start planning the program in Gracias after Semana Santa. The program is for 5-7th graders, and talks about saving money and how to form your own business (as simple as selling popsicles). The math methodology was separate from the business program, and we learned lots of different ways to MAKE MATH FUN! That part was actually really useful for me- hopefully I will be able to make use of it in site, but if not, definitely back in the states.

We had the training at this gorgeous university campus called Zamorano- it’s a hands on agricultural college with lots of land, friendly people and an Espresso Americano. I always love getting to spend all week with the other youthies… it’s a nice reminder than we’re not in this alone. As integrated as one can be in their Peace Corps community, there is something to be said about empathy, and how far it goes. Your community members can sympathize with the challenges that come along with leaving your home/family/friends/culture/language for two years, but it’s other volunteers who truly understand. I also had an unexpected extended stay in Teguz for some medical appointments (which ended up taking the entire week)… since I live so far away, I am hardly ever in the office, so I was finally able to learn my way around. And while I was there, as horrifying as that city is, I definitely felt taken care of by the PC staff (the doctors, admn, my project team, etc). They were all so wonderful and genuinely cared- this is my first post-graduation full time work experience, so I don’t know if most jobs are like that, but it’s nice to know that other people have your back.

A quick side note about littering… I was on the bus on my way back, sitting by the window, clutching some garbage I had collected in one hand, and a book in the other, when two different people, one sitting next to me and the other in front of me, said “permiso” (excuse me), and reached across me to throw their trash out the window of the bus. This poor country is covered with chip bags, empty coke bottles, wrappers, etc. Of course, it’s hard to cultivate the mentality of putting your trash in the trash can when most of the time there are no trash cans, but still, something can be done. I almost wanted to say to these people, if they treat their country like a dump, it will ALWAYS be a dump. But then it all comes back to lack of education, which isn’t an excuse but certainly offers an explanation. Visiting Danli I saw “Demuestra su educacion, ponga la basura en su lugar” (Show your education, put the trash in it’s place) written on walls…. I am going to see if maybe we can make some sort of mural at the Youth Center with that same phrase.

That is all for now.... take care, love Lisa.

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

And the strike continues.... but at least we have toothbrushes!

So, the teacher’s strike continues. This is week three, and the school year just started about five weeks ago. Why are the striking? Some say it’s because the government is taking their retirement money. Some say it’s because they haven’t been paid since last year. Some say it’s because there is talk of privatizing public education. But most say that they honestly don’t know. Teachers, who have more or less abandoned their classes two weeks into the school year, after last year when their students lost 2 full months of classes, are unable to give you a legitimate reason for the indefinite strike. That is not to say that they don’t have the right to be upset… though I don’t understand the ins and outs of Honduran politics, I can empathize with them in the sense that they are not being treated justly by the government. Do I, however, think that is a justification for a nation wide teacher’s strike that began before the teacher’s unions even tried negotiating with the government? Absolutely not. It’s a messy situation, but robbing the future of this country of their right to an education is probably the worst way to solve things… talk about hindering development! (photo to the left is a school without students- looks abandoned!)

A lot of Youth volunteers find themselves at a loss during the strikes, as many of us are assigned to the schools. No school no work. I am not assigned to a single school, and as grateful as I am for that, I am still hard pressed to stay busy. During strikes, kids sometimes seem to disappear, and forget about trying to train teachers because they don’t want to hear it. There were 27 teachers signed up to take a course about teaching English and methodology with me, and not one showed up to the introduction meeting last week. Thankfully my IHNFA kids still come, since that’s their only opportunity to eat decent meals! My counterpart that went with me to the Yo Merezco training (self-esteem/abstinence program for girls) came back super excited to start the program, which was wonderful! We’ve been waiting to see how the strike pans out, as we had a proposal all set for the public schools, but since it’s looking like it could be a while, we are going to try and start it with one of the private bilingual schools in town.


Yesterday I went on the radio to talk to an audience of about 5,000 about respect, and how in such a beautiful community with such hospitable people, it is a shame to see such a lack of it, especially towards women, when you walk down the street. I pleaded with parents to talk to their children about how they should treat everyone with dignity and respect, because unfortunately the examples that they see on the streets are giving the opposite message. And I asked mototaxi drivers to be more careful and responsible, because when they turn around while driving to cat-call girls, they could very easily hit a child, or a dog, or drive off the road- it’s dangerous! I was nervous about offending people so I made equal commentary about how great the people I know here are, and I thanked them for taking care of me and treating me like part of their family, and that working with their kids has been the best job I have ever had, then I asked them to work together with me to try and break this vicious cycle, maybe not in Honduras as a whole, but at least within our community. I also didn’t say my name, nor did I say I was affiliated with Peace Corps, nor any other details that could give me away- they just knew I was a North American volunteer. There are plenty of foreigners that pass through my town that I am not worried, and afterwards, the guy in charge of the radio thanked me so much and he said I delivered my message perfectly, it was something people needed to hear, and no one should be offended. Then he said I could come back any time! If these strikes continue, I might take him up on his offer and give some parenting charlas via the radio.

My colgate program is off and running! I have never seen kids so excited about brushing their teeth! In the States, it’s a chore for most kids, but here, for most of them it’s the first time they’ve ever had a toothbrush, and we make it fun, so they LOVE IT! While they brush, I sing, and they shake their hips to the beat, and it’s the most adorable thing I have ever seen. PLEASE everyone at home, switch to colgate for your dental hygiene products! They donate so many brushes and toothpaste every year to kids in developing countries, it is such a fabulous program! I have always been an avid aquafresh endorser (tri-colored toothpaste, how could you NOT endorse that?), but now I feel inclined to switch too.

That is about it for now… hopefully the teachers reach an agreement of some sort with the government soon…. this is RIDICULOUS. In the meantime, I continue teaching good dental health habits, doing story hour and reading/writing activities, pressuring the local government to give me money so I can start Yo Merezco in the private schools, and contemplating what to do with my new found power at the radio station. Also, I just booked my flight home for August!!! I will land in Red Sox Nation August 9th in time to fulfill my maid of honor duties as my big sister gets married!!

Monday, March 7, 2011

Happy 50th Birthday, Peace Corps!!!!


March 1st, 2011, marked 50 years of the existence of the United States Peace Corps. I was in the middle of a training, so I haven't been able to post a commemorative blog entry until now.

The Peace Corps is celebrating 50 years of service this month, and Honduras was one of the first PC countries, so we will be celebrating 50 years of Peace Corps in Honduras in a few months.

Here are bits and pieces from a recent article:

Peace Corps: A Program for the 21st Century


"If the president proposed a program today that was cost-effective, inspired public service, trained Americans for 21st century jobs, strengthened our interests abroad, countered anti-American propaganda and had bipartisan support, we would consider it miraculous. Yet, we already have a program that does all those things. Today is the 50th anniversary of the executive order signed by President John F. Kennedy that established the Peace Corps. Unfortunately, much of the discussion about the program recently seems to be stuck in a time warp. Supporters and detractors alike talk about the Peace Corps as if it were a 1960s-era program -- a disservice because it's actually more modern than many realize.

When the Peace Corps started, many thought government could do just about anything: send a man to the moon, win the Cold War, and end poverty. The Peace Corps was born of that optimism. Although poverty remains far too pervasive, having sent a man to the moon and won the Cold War, we know that some of those ideas weren't entirely fanciful.

Today, we live in a far more cautious time, which blurs the fact that the Peace Corps makes every bit as much sense now as it did in 1961. To start, it's a remarkably cost-effective program. In its entire 50-year history, we have spent less money on the Peace Corps than one percent of the defense budget for just this year, approximately $7 billion in 2011. Given that, the Peace Corps is less than a rounding error in the U.S. budget. Yet, it supports 8,600 volunteers in 76 countries and directly affects at least one million lives each year.

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The Peace Corps helps Americans know the world as it is and as it is becoming. In today's interconnected world we need to know how the world really works, especially in developing countries where there are myriad emerging business opportunities. Basically, the Peace Corps is a 21st century job-training program. It provides the kind of training in language, adaptability, working in foreign cultures that simply can't be taught in business school because to truly understand the world you have to live as others do, seeing the world as they do.

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There are very few programs today that can bring both parties together, yet the Peace Corps is popular with both Republicans and Democrats and enjoys bipartisan support in Congress. It's also been touted by Presidents Ronald Reagan and Lyndon Johnson, George W. Bush and Barack Obama.

It is almost inconceivable to think of a program that could do all of this on such a small budget. So today, on its golden anniversary, let's take a moment to commemorate the Peace Corps as a modern-day initiative and recognize its successes over the last five decades. President Kennedy created a valuable program that was amazing in 1961, and is still remarkable 50 years later."


Kevin F. F. Quigley (Thailand 76-79) is president of the National Peace Corps Association


Here is a link to a video from youtube of President Kennedy proposing the Peace Corps, almost exactly 50 years ago:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yOQ85OEZhWg