Vickie
This is a hard post to make. So hard in fact that I've put off writing it for about 8 weeks. On June 13th, Jim and I ended our Peace Corps service. It was completely a health related decision. Jim was sick and couldn't recover. We struggled with the decision for 2 months, but finally it just became impossible to keep doing the work while feeling sick and not knowing whether he could recover.
So, we packed up most of our things -- all that we could possible lug around from Los Patos to the capital via guaguas and taxis - about 6 or so hours away. Probably the next few days were the easiest days for me because I was relieved to be going home, back to my friends, back to good food, back to a place where I felt comfortable. It was easy not to think about what we were leaving behind while our focus was on getting to a safe place.
Once we got home, Jim was diagnosed with E Coli and treated and is now free of the bacteria. He was never diagnosed in the DR - we were never close enough to doctors and clinics to get a diagnosis. Apparently, once your intestinal system is stressed (from multiple antibiotics and recurring bacterial infections) it is very hard to bring it back to normal so Jim has been on a lactose free, bland diet since we returned. In the past few weeks he has started to eat more normally and has improved. So, that is all good.
What have we been doing since June 13th? Well, the first day back we bought a car and and 2 cell phones. The second day we were home, we looked at house that a friend of a friend was going to put on the market the following week. We loved the house. It was in the part of town we had planned to move to after our Peace Corps service. The price was fair, we needed a place to live, we thought it was the perfect house for us -- just needed a kitchen renovation -- so we bought it!
We had a list of things we really wanted in our down-sized home. A non-creepy basement, a garage, a nice yard with maybe a patio instead of a deck that needs refinishing every couple of years, a front porch, and a sunny spot for a garden. We never expected to really find all of these things in a city neighborhood. We had looked around the Highlands and Crescent Hill many times over the past 8 years or so without ever finding all of those things. Well, guess what -- this house had it all, down to the sunny spot for the garden.
Meanwhile we stayed with a couple of good friends, where we had time to recuperate and regroup, relax and try to get our bearings again. Their hospitality made it possible for us to take the time we needed to refocus.
After a few weeks, we found the perfect little Ford Ranger truck. So now we were up to speed: 2 vehicles, 2 cell phones, and a house.
We moved our first PODS (Portable On-Demand Storage) into the house on July 25th. We had some furniture and quite a few boxes of kitchen items. Since our plan was to re-do the kitchen we sent most of the kitchen boxes to the basement, arranged the other furniture, and sat down to talk about when to order the next PODS. This PODS had stuff from when we sold our house in Oldham County and moved to an apartment in the Highlands, about a year and 1/2 ago. We happened to be sitting on the couch with a good friend, talking about wanting to repaint everything in 6 months or so after we'd settled in, and she said - Really if you're going to paint - do it before you move in the next PODS. So, we did -- and with an old house, it's a lot of work -- but we're making progress - 2nd PODS was delivered last week. Still painting though -- decided to do the whole house -- outside needs it too. Kitchen renovation should start within a week or so. Then I guess we'll be living in the basement.
So, all this is just to say we've been really busy, which is a good thing, because it keeps us from dwelling too much on what we left behind. We're really sorry we couldn't complete what we had set out to do, what we planned for, worked for, trained for, and were ready to do. We miss our friends and co-volunteers in the Dominican Republic, and the people that we met and were just getting to know.
Earlier, I said I was relieved to return home to a comfortable place, and I was. The understanding that I have now, that I didn't have before is how hard it is to live, really live, not just visit, in a different culture. I understood it intellectually, but I didn't feel it. I didn't feel the strain it is to lean forward in every conversation, straining to understand, not just the words but the intent of what is said, and missing it half the time. I didn't understand how much I would miss just sitting comfortably with friends, laughing and talking about shared memories and current events. I didn't know how much I would miss fresh vegetables, spices, chocolate, and protein. I seriously underestimated how much I needed my routines and activities: bike riding, hiking, quilting, jewelry making, genealogical research, and gardening - to feel like myself, to feel complete.
I realize that I had lost my identity -- or that the culture I was in did not recognize my identity -- the things that mean so much to me really were not a part of this new culture and so I was an outsider. It does not feel good to be an outsider. You lose that thing that makes you strong and confident. You often feel clumsy, incapable, and uncertain. It is no fun at all. I know that in time, this would have changed -- or I believe that it would have and the Peace Corps assures you that you will assimilate in time - and they give you a whole list of ways to help with the process, but the process is messy and miserable and only changes by degree. It relieves you of pretenses and defenses and brings about a transformation. But we didn't make the transformation and left during the messy, uncomfortable part, so that is the baggage we dragged home along with our suitcases.
However, it'a a beautiful, cool, sunny day here in Louisville. I have so much and it's mostly good. I'm retired! I live a mile from the park and a mile from the bakery. I have the time I need to think about what to do next. I have a grandson who just started Kindergarten. I have friends, family, and Jim. So life is good and the journey continues.
Primera Mano: Peace Corps Experiences in the DR
Sunday, August 19, 2012
Sunday, May 27, 2012
Jimmy Wheatley's Super Fantastic Time Machine (A Brief History of Time)
by Jim
Who knew? It really is possible
to travel in time!
Everything being relative,
however, I am unable to tell you exactly where I am at the moment. I know it is
not in the future, I’ve been there (that's where you live). It could be the past
but I’m pretty sure if I walk up the trail into the mountains here I will move
further back in time.
Therefore, I must be in the
present. But, this present is strange; I don’t understand anything.
Eating here is a problem. This
morning I decided to follow the Peace Corps advice and take care of myself
first. I was hungry. I decided to walk around
the pueblo and visit the two
colmados (tiny stores that sell rum and beer, soap, grain and the occasional
limp carrot) and the two street venders that set up shop each day on the main
drag, to see what I could find. I found one tiny onion, one tiny tomato, 4 pieces
of bread and three mangos. There was nothing else. But when I returned home, a
neighbor had dropped off a dozen mangos and some bananas.
We are not starving, and it seems
like we always manage to find something (se Dios quiere) but it is pretty close
to the edge. The fruit here is incredible and yesterday I found some avocados,
today no.
I’ve been thinking of traveling
further back in time. All I need to do is walk up the mountain. I am a little
afraid, however, because I have heard that illegal Haitians live there. I know
it is just fear of the unknown, but to me, “There be Dragons”! or, at least
Haitians living in huts with no electricity, no running water and no latrines.
That is what I think I will find. Another problem is that they speak different
language back then.
I think there must be a worm hole
nearby. There are military checkpoints along the road leading away from here.
The soldiers are trying to catch the Haitians; the past is trying to sneak into
the present.
A long, long time ago, in a
galaxy far, far away (last year in the US) the same thing was happening. As I
recall it couldn’t be stopped. The past can be relentless.
I have learned a few things
traveling through time. A lot of people living in the past are trying to travel
to the future. Only Peace Corps volunteers, some religious folks, NGO’s and a
few ne’er-do-wells are traveling the other direction. And, most of the folks
living in the future just want everybody to stay where they are.
Monday, May 21, 2012
Haitians
By Vickie
Jim was stuck in the capital undergoing some tests, but I
decided to head back to our site on my own on Saturday and then head out for
Kreyòl camp on Monday morning.
Before leaving for camp, I was completely oblivious to who
might or might not be Haitian. The day before I left, a girl about high school
age came to stay with Katy. Her name is Yanuli, she’s Haitian, and she normally
lives with and works for Katy’s mom.
Katy’s mom left for a week in the capital, probably because that’s where
she’s registered to vote, and in the Dominican Republic, you have to vote where
you registered – forever. That’s why all Peace Corps volunteers are in
“Stand Fast" mode. That means don’t get on the roads for any reason. Lots of
extra traffic because of the voting laws and tempers are high.
So Yanuli is here. Her mom is in Haiti and Yanuli says she
coming here soon. Yanuli says there are many, many Haitians here and that some
do not speak Spanish at all. I know this is true, because yesterday Jim and I
walked up the dirt road beside our house – straight up the side of the mountain
for about a quarter of mile to where it levels out. The view of the sea is
beautiful and unobstructed from up there.
And there's a nice breeze. |
There is a small canal filled with water that runs from here
all the way to Pedernales, a town about 2 hours from here on the Haitian
border. It was built by the government so the farmers can irrigate their crops.
Above the canal the trees have been somewhat cleared and there are crops
growing: corn, plantanos, mangos, and probably lots of other things we couldn’t
see.
We did run into 5 people up there, all carrying sacks of
fruit or viveres (white, bland food like potatoes, bananas, etc.) As usual, we said, “Buenos días,” to everyone
we met. Normally, we get a big smile and a return, “Buenos días. ¿Como
estan?” But this time, we got only
nervous smiles.
Finally, I decided to try Kreyòl. “Bon swa,” I said to an older
man carrying a basket of fish. Big, big smile, a wave, and a “Bon swa,” in
return. Yes, there are many Haitians in
my community. Now I notice the men and women sitting beside the main road
selling fruits and viveres grown up on the mountain. I listen carefully and hear Kreyòl. So, I’ll keep studying and maybe Yanuli will
help me.
Sunday, May 20, 2012
Kreyòl Camp
By Vickie
On Saturday, I made
it back from the capital to my site without any problems. I took a taxi to
Caribe Tours, where there were about 15 young Peace Corps volunteers headed
to…… our site. It is known as one of the most beautiful, inexpensive, and unspoiled
beaches in the DR. They had all been in country for a year and were taking a
week off to vacation. We separated in
Barahona and they headed off to find food, while I wandered around looking for
a guagua to take me home.
The weekend passed uneventfully and I headed to Batey 9 on
Monday morning at 8. Fortunately, one of the volunteers I met on Monday had
given me good directions to Batey 9, because somehow I got left off the
distribution list for information about the camp. I caught a guagua to Barahona
– old hat. Once there, I got help from the lady sitting next to me in finding
the next guagua that would take me to Batey 4. Basically, she grabbed my
motorcycle helmet, said, “Follow me,” and started asking around until she found
the guagua. I can tell you that I truly do “depend on the kindness of
strangers” to survive here.
This guagua drove slowly out of Barahona and into the flat,
dry, dusty plains to the North. Covered with scrub brush and sugarcane. Sugarcane and dirt: gray, dusty dirt. And bateys. Houses of tabla (rough wood) and
zinc. Streets of dusty dirt. Electricity is sporadic, water comes to the batey through
a pump where people take buckets to collect water. Some have water inside their
homes, but many don’t.
At Batey 4, I got
off the guagua and looked at the group of men on their motoconchos waiting
under large shade tree for customers. I picked out an older guy and told him I
needed a slow and smooth ride. We rode
down a dirt road beside a canal looking out over miles and miles of sugarcane,
with beautiful blue mountains in the distance, fading into the blue of the
sky. I told him a little bit about why
I’m here – volunteering, working with people – and he told me about how
politicians say things but don’t mean them – that they are liars. “Sí,” I said.
Washing clothes. |
I have to say I’m glad I’m in a pueblo and not in a batey.
When we first arrived and walked around, I just became more and more depressed
as we walked. Everything is dirt. Everyone has to live in dirt. Yes, they sweep
the dirt and pick up the garbage in their yards. But in common areas and
outside of the batey, there is trash – trash in the road, in the scrub brush,
stuck on the barbed wire fences. And even if there’s no trash, there’s still
dirt. The children walk in it, play in it, the parents work in it. It’s just
really hard for me to accept it and the first sight of it was very
discouraging. And it was in the afternoon and the heat and sun were oppressive
and suffocating.
Main Street |
A beautiful smile. |
After a few days though, greeting and being greeted by adults and children in Kreyòl (or Spanish – our choice) with beautiful smiles and a willingness to stop anything and talk with us, or to share warm “biskwit” (biscuits) fresh from the dutch oven cooked over a fogón, I started to feel the beauty there. In the evenings, the air was cool and fresh with an uplifting breeze flowing down from the mountains. The sunset and shadows on the mountains were a visual delight, and always there were sheep, goats, children, dogs, chickens, and cute little pigs running around to keep us entertained.
Add dutch oven -- biskwit follows! |
Start with hot coals. |
The view from our dorm room. |
He came every day to watch our class. |
The week was wonderful. Our teacher, Getro, works at a private school in the capital. He teaches Spanish and English, but he also speaks Kreyòl and French. He’s Haitian. There were 9 of us in the class – all young volunteers in their early 20’s. I’m the doña – mother. We stayed in two separate dormitory type rooms, maintained by the pastor there – an evangelical pastor who has lived and worked in the community for 25 years. He loves to host Kreyòl camp because he thinks it’s important that we understand a little bit about the Haitian language and culture before going to work in the bateys.
My camp mates and teacher. |
The Dormitory. |
A few amazing things happened while I was there. The first
day, I arrived at about the same time that a huge air-conditioned bus arrived,
unloading a group of nurse practitioners from the US. They were there to
dispense medication, give Pap smears to the women, and do dental work – just
for that one day. They set up shop in the girls’ dorm. The amazing thing was –
they were from Carson Newman College in East Tennessee. That’s where my dad
spent his first year in college, before WWII intervened. In the middle of
nowhere, listening to the familiar cadence of my east Tennessee cousins. It was
a happy surprise.
I also found a very surprising thing at one of the small
homes in the batey. A huge confederate flag used a door curtain. The house was
painted in the colors of the flag – blue and red. Our teacher had walked to the
house with me to ask if it would be OK to take a picture. After we left he
said, “Ésto es una cosa de brujas.” That’s a witch thing. The colors, the
bottles buried in the ground and the little scraps of fabric hanging under the
porch were all signs of witchcraft he said. I have a lot to learn.
Thursday afternoon at around 4 PM we were treated to a music
and dance exhibition – a group of men rolled into town in the back of a truck,
with handmade and hand-painted wind instruments and drums. The amount and
variety of music they made with these simple instruments was amazing. The set
up a rhythm, got a groove going, and two men dressed in jeans, Tshirts, rag
skirts, wildly decorated caps, and sunglasses, did a very sexy hip gyrating
dance – imitating women? Anyway, I was reminded of Michael Jackson in the
precision and subtlety of each move, mostly concentrated in the hip area. After
awhile, they headed off down the street with a large crowd following them,
dancing and singing.
Earlier that day, while we were in Kreyòl class, we heard a
wild, terrified screaming squeal coming from down the street. We all ran to the
windows to see who was being murdered. Under a large tree a small group of men
had hog-tied…..a hog. A monstrous gray hog lay kicking and crying out for dear
life. He knew exactly what was up. A large group of little boys stood watching
the spectacle. After awhile the hog settled down – not sure if he was just worn
out or if they had drugged him somehow. I thought maybe they had cut his
throat, but no. There was a motoconcho parked there with two boards tied longways across the back. The
men hoisted this monster onto those two boards and tied him down.
To market, to market to sell a fat pig.
The real surprise for me though, was the next morning. I
walked out from the dorm, headed to class, and under that same tree, lying on a
table was the gray hog – minus head, feet, and entrails. All day long, the men
cut pieces from the hog, hung them in the tree and waited for customers to come
by.
I left at noon that day, working my way back home, making
the connections with help from strangers, and Jim met me at the street leading
up to our house. As the day was crushingly hot, he convinced me to head to the
little river that our town is famous for and hop in. This river is about 200
yards long, it comes up from underground and flows into the blindingly
beautiful sea. It is clean and cold and we were refreshed. Sigh.
Friday, May 18, 2012
Playa Esperanza
Playa Esperanza!
Home, not so sweet home!
Not yet, anyway.
Maybe never! Who knows? I don’t know if I can really do this. Hell, I
don’t even know what to do. Maybe that’s the point. I need to figure this out.
But, this place is so damned beautiful it can bring a tear
to your eye just to look around. It is that beautiful. Imagine the most
beautiful tropical paradise you can, with no high rise hotels, thatched roofed
huts and colorful houses on the side of the mountain overlooking the sea and no
tourists. Ok, now, it is twice that beautiful.
There is a problem though. I’m not here on vacation. I’m
here to help.
For the past three months the Peace Corps has spent a lot of
money and time to prepare me to do just that. They’ve said, “just do your
community diagnostic. Don’t put too much pressure on yourself. You will figure
out what to do, Relax!”
I was told that by a string of very successful volunteers
who have done incredible things here. They made presentations to us about their
projects.
Well, I’m not a trainee anymore and I feel the pressure.
Here in Playa Esperanza, I can tell, the people are
watching. They are curious. They think, who
is this old guy and what is he going to do?
This is a poor community. The people here need jobs,
latrines, running water and electricity. What can I do? And, just to add a
little more pressure, that community diagnostic thing needs to be done in
partnership with someone from here. We are supposed to make a joint project
presentation to the Peace Corps at the end of July. I don’t even know who that
person is yet. Yep, pressure!
So, what I’ve been doing is walking around a lot. I walk to
the computer lab in the morning and hang out with the teenagers playing on
Facebook. One of my goals is to help make this lab sustainable. They run Linux
on the computers. I’m not sure if that is a great idea so I’ve been Googling
lots of stuff about Linux, trying to get up to speed. I’ve got lots of time.
Later, I take a walk around the pueblo and aggravate the
inhabitants. Here’s how it works. I spot a victim sitting in the shade. It is
really hot here. I stop and introduce myself. They always offer me a chair. We
talk. I try to remember their names. This is especially difficult as I usually
cannot pronounce their names. What I wouldn’t give for a Sam, Fred or Susie. Of course,
everything is in Spanish.
I took a walk on the beach late yesterday afternoon. The
fishing boats had just returned. There is no dock or harbor here, just a
beautiful gravel beach with huge waves. The boats, small, painted blue and
white, surf in and are quickly pulled up on a very steep beach. There was a
group of people under some trees. There had about 50 fish piled up; large fish,
2 to 2.5 feet long. I have no idea what kind they were but I have discovered
they taste delicious. The fishermen were
paying their assistants one fish each for their day’s work and bartering the
rest. Money? There is not much around.
Last night I was playing bachata in the street with my
amigo, Victor. He is a talented 29 year old who really has it going on on the
guitar. His guitar is crap, of course, and borrowed. But, he can follow
anything and he knows how to jam. So, we are playing Stand By Me, bachata
style. I’m singing. There is a crowd of kids listening and dancing. When I get
to the chorus, I have help. There are these three girls, all about 10 years
old, dancing and singing, “Darling, darling stand by me, won’t you stand by
me.” Their dancing was perfect and so was their singing. Incredible!
So, I stay here, feeling a bit manic. Loving the place and
wanting to be anywhere else in the world, all in the span of an hour.
Note: The real name of our place is not Playa Esperanza. The Peace Corps asks that volunteers not put actual locations in blogs. I'm a rule follower.
Note: The real name of our place is not Playa Esperanza. The Peace Corps asks that volunteers not put actual locations in blogs. I'm a rule follower.
Saturday, May 12, 2012
Swearing In
By Jim Wheatley
There are 40 new Peace Corps volunteers in the Dominican
Republic.
When you are accepted
in the Peace Corps, you have only been accepted to go through training.
Training is hard, very hard; ten weeks of working as hard as you have ever
worked, to learn a culture, a language and whatever specialty the Peace Corps
has decided fits you and the needs of the host country. There are tests, lots
of tests. You have to score at least an 80 on everything and your language
level, on some international scale they use, has to be at least a 5 out of 10.
Luckily I came here 6.
So, after 10 weeks of boot camp, if they keep you and if you
decide to stay, there is a swearing in ceremony. Ours was May 9th
2012. It was kind of a big deal. The US ambassador
and several other dignitaries spoke. About
150 people were there. Other than the 40 new volunteers most of the rest
of the attendees were Dominican. It was really quite a shindig. Taking the
Peace Corps oath in two languages and singing both countries national anthems
was kind of emotional.
And, there was this other thing: I was voted by the class of
new volunteers to speak on our behalf. Did I mention that the whole event was
in Spanish? Well, it was and so were my remarks. I was very honored to have
been chosen. I had a little help from some of my Dominican friends and I think
it came off OK. At least the Peace Corp Country Director and the US Ambassador were
smiling at the end.
Here’s my speech in two languages:
Honorable
Embajador de Estados Unidos, Raul Ysaguirre,
Estemado
Ernesto Reuna, Ministro de Medio Ambiente y Recursos Naturales,
Estemado
Miguel León, Gerente de Programas, Cuerpo de Paz,
Estemada
Rosanna Hidalgo, Representante de las Families
¡Bienvenidos!
Y, Bienvenidos
a todos los profesores de español, todos los entrenadores de Cuerpo de Paz,
todos voluntarios, los familias que nos
ayuden, me esposa, Vickie. Y,
bienvenidos a Esperanza y Pedro, nuestra familia y nuestros amigos.
Cuando
llegamos a la Republica Dominica, los primeros días, nos sentimos como una
pelota perdido en hierbas altas.
Pero, después
de diez semanas con los mejores profesores de español en el mundo, después de diez
semanas con los entrenadores técnicos fantásticos, ahora no estamos en hierbas
altas. Ahora, nos sentimos como una pelota perdido en cañaveral.
Es difícil.
De hecho,
ha sido doloroso.
Hemos
tenido denge.
Hemos
tenido una pierna quemada.
Hemos caído
en un hoyo de la calle.
Ya, hemos
tenido problemas de la piel y más.
Y, nos
hemos sentido solos y tristes.
Pero, después
de diez semanas estamos aquí! Todos, los cuarenta voluntarios nuevos. Pero, ¿Por
qué? Solo son tres horas por avión parra llegar a Miami. ¿Por qué nos hemos
quedado?
Nos hemos
quedado porque en El Seibo hemos tocado bachata con quitaras con Domingo debajo
de la luna llena.
Nos hemos
quedado porque conocimos a Ariel su primera día en su trabajo nuevo como un
traductor de ingles. Y Descubrimos que él había aprendido hablar ingles por un
voluntario de Cuerpo de Paz que vivió en su pueblo.
Nos hemos
quedado por la cara de orgullo que vimos en Manuela cuando trajó su madre, su
abuela, dos tías y dos hermanos al ayuntamento para la presentación público del documental que su grupo de jóvenes
hizo con la ayuda de unos aspirantes de Cuerpo de Paz.
Y, yo me he
quedado porque cuando conocí a los otros aspirantes y voluntarios de Cuerpo de
Paz, me di cuenta que nunca he sido parte de un grupo como este. Un grupo tan inteligente,
tan creativo, tan serio y tan dedicado. Deseo seguir siendo parte de este
grupo.
Yo no se si
es posible hacer una diferencia aquí pero, creo que debemos tratar.
Como decía
la Madre Teresa,
“Si no
puedes alimentar a cien personas, alimente sólo uno.”
Translation;
When we arrived in the Dominican Republic, those first days
we felt like a lost ball in high weeds. But, after 10 weeks with the best
Spanish teachers in the world, after 10 weeks with fantastic trainers, now we
are not in high weeds. Now, we feel like a lost ball in a huge field of sugar
cane.
It is difficult.
In fact it has been painful!
We’ve had denge.
We broke our knee.
We burned our leg.
We fell in a hole in the street.
We’ve had skin problems and more.
And, we’ve been lonely.
But after 10 weeks we are still here!
All of us, 40 new volunteers.
But, why? It is only three hours by plane to Miami. Why have
we stayed?
We have stayed because in El Seibo we played bachata on
guitar with Domingo under a full moon.
We’ve stayed because we met Ariel his first day on his new
job as an English translator. And, we discovered that he learned English from a
Peace Corps volunteer who used to live in his pueblo.
We stayed because of the look of pride on Manuela’s face
when she brought her mother, grandmother, two aunts and brother and sister to
the Mayor’s office to see the public presentation of the documentary her youth
group made with the help of Peace Corps trainees.
And, I’ve stayed because when I met the other trainees and
volunteers of the Peace Corps I realized that I had never been part of group
like this. A group so intelligent, so creative, so serious and so dedicated. I
want to remain part of this group.
I don’t know if we can make a difference here but, I think
we should try.
In the words of Mother Theresa, “If you can’t feed one hundred
people, feed just one.”
Monday, May 7, 2012
CBT – Community Based Training
by Vickie
Again, no photos but we'll add them when we can.
Again, no photos but we'll add them when we can.
We survived Community Based Training.
The bad thing about
community based training is that everything we’re doing is not real – it’s just
practice. It’s important and I learned a lot, but it was a time to endure. The living conditions were pretty terrible
because the kitchen and bathroom were dirty-make that filthy, our host family
refused to buy the clean, sealed water we’re supposed to drink, hand washing
did not exist in their home, and in the filthy bathroom, there was no toilet
seat. Jim lost 15 pounds and I lost 10 as a result of consistent diarrhea. My
thigh muscles are pretty strong now from 5 weeks of squatting over the toilet,
so with every awful thing, I guess there is something good.
The other good thing about CBT is that we had an excellent
trainer and a great group of 12 trainees, working together in El Seibo for 5
weeks. During the very first week, we
had to complete a mini-Community Diagnostic. This is where you talk to complete
strangers in their homes about who the heck you are, what a Peace Corps
volunteer is – and then asking these strangers questions about resources,
problems, leaders, education, civic groups, etc. etc. – in the community. This is done with a level of Spanish that is
really inadequate to the task. We also,
spent time observing in the elementary school, and making informal observations
about the pueblo (small city) – like how many and what kinds of stores they
have, how do people get around, where do
they get water, what social agencies exist, etc. etc.
At the end of the week, we each had to develop a 10-15 minute presentation in Spanish –
outlining strengths and weaknesses in the community – especially in the area of
education – and then develop possible projects we might undertake in the
community – IF we were going to be there. Very stressful, but this is what
we’ll be doing for the first three months of service in our real community.
Mostly this is called “compartiendo”or sharing.
Domincans talk to each other a
lot. They always say hello and ask after your family when they see you on the
street or sitting in the galleria – that’s kind of like the front porch. You’re
always invited to come in and sit down and you’ll get the best seat in the
house – even if it’s only a plastic chair. If they can afford it, you’ll get a
fruit drink or un chin’de café – a little coffee. This is true, even if they
don’t know you. If you smile and say
hello, you will be invited in.
After the first week, we spent lots of time giving and
receiving charlas (workshops) on education programs that volunteers are
involved in here in the DR. The thing is – until this year, there was no
education sector in the DR – it was ICT – Information and Communication
Technology – it’s what all 12 people in our group thought they were signing on
for. When we got here – we were told that the literacy level of the students in
the DR is so low that the volunteers in ICT were spending most of their time
teaching literacy skills – so – the PC hired a new leader and we are in the process
of creating a new program – Education.
I’m thrilled of course – and
everyone in the group is so positive and ready to take on this new program –
but with very little background in Education. We spent time in elementary
schools learning how to assess reading levels and how to work with students who
are both above and below level in reading – in Spanish.
So the first three months after we are sworn in as
volunteers (in 2 more weeks) are spent talking, asking questions, learning
everything we can about the community, in conjunction with our project
partners. Our project partners are people from the community and we will each
have two partners.
These are people who volunteered to help us integrate into
the community by talking with us and introducing us to key people they may
know. They may also end up working with us, but not necessarily. Heaven knows why they would volunteer to work
with strangers from the US for two years – probably to find out why the heck
people from the US would choose to live in a poor country working with
strangers for 2 years away from their
family and friends. Maybe we can all help each other out with some self-analysis.
Maybe 6 months from now, I’ll be able to explain why I’m here!
The house where we lived for 5 weeks. Upstairs is an apartment the family rents out. Downstairs includes a small clothing shop - part time business for the family. |
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