Friday, June 27, 2008

Seeing Some Rain

This week has been a lot more rainy then the past two, finally! I had started to wonder why they had called it the rainy season. Last weekend I went to Granada which is when the rain really started to pick up. Even with the rain, Granada is a beautiful city. It is one of the oldest colonial towns in Nicaragua and a major tourist stop. The cathedral that sits in the middle of the town is a brilliant orange trimmed with white and red and all the buildings that sit around it are equally as vibrant in color. Couldn´t help take more pictures then I needed to. Because Granada hosts so many tourists the food was fantastic... legitimate (by my standards) pizza, spanish pasta, waffles, the list goes on. I plan on going back to Granada when I again get tired of rice and beans and my highly uncomfortable bed in Jinotepe.

This week at the coorperativa I have been doing preparation work to start writing a grant to FSD for funds to get a english school started. I am trying to pull together proof that this is a primary need of the community, thus I have been formulating a few different surveys as well as doing some investigative work at various cybers. I am a little frustrated with my director because I do not feel he is looking at the project (specifically the budget) realistically. I am dragging my feet a bit because while I do not doubt that english classes would benefit the community, I do not feel that this would be the best way to utilize this grant opportunity. At the moment I am working on the grant to appease my director and prove to myself that this is a realistic task. This is what I have been working on in the mornings. At 2:00 when the youth arrive I drop everything and spend time roaming through workshops, helping when I can, and brainstorming different workshops I can do with the youth in the coming weeks. The other day I was in the baking workshop and they were making cakes, it smelled so good. I felt like I was back working at the Bradely Inn. The feeling was so strong, it was like I walked through the door and ended up in Maine putting together desserts at my little station by the window.

I usually arrive home from work at 5:00 and my host mom greets me with a drawn out hOOOla then uses the momentum from her rocking chair to stand up and put together my dinner. I have beans, rice, and a boiled plantain for every meal (besides breakfast) accompanied by some sort of meat for lunch and usually a block of cheese for dinner. I have no idea what kind of cheese it is... I struggled to get it down at first, but I am starting to enjoy it more and more.

I am heading back to Managua today for a talk on the economic crisis in Nicaragua with all the FSD interns. I hope to figure out weekend plans then, maybe a trip to the beach, Estali, Leon, further explorations of Granada...

Friday, June 20, 2008

Santa´s Workshop

On Monday I started work at the Coorperativa de Desarollo Social Comunitario. My host brother, Yasser, walked with me my first day to make sure I didn't get lost. It is a nice five minute walk and is located directly accross from the hospital in Jinotepe and next to a center for infants. The building used to be a hotel but was converted to a childrens center by the government in the first Ortega administration. The facilities are therefore very spacious with a room for a small office with computers as well as various rooms for "classes" in carpentry, cloathing design, crafts, baking, and more. Upon arrival at 8 no one had yet arrived so I let myself in and waited. Around 830 the four people who run the coorperativa arrived. They instantly sat down with me to begin the discussion of their goals and the process in which their organization is run. They quickly discovered that my spanish was in the developing stage and slowed down their talking a bit. I was able to understand more or less.

One of the main goal of the organization is to provide children who live in the poorest areas of Jinotepe a base of knowledge and values that will contibute to their success in the future. In order to achieve this they offer workshops in carpentry, baking, and cloathing design for children ages 14 to 18 and various crafts for kids ranging from 8 to 13. The idea is that through these workshops the youth can take a base of skills and a working mentality to apply to future job possibilities. The children arrive after school hours at 2 and remain until 5. Before the youth arrived on my first day I was showed various things that they have created in recent months... beautiful chairs, tables, skirts, button down shirts, the list goes on and on. I was increadibly impressed. When the youth arrived at 2 I couldn't help but imagine that what I was seeing must be remenicent of what has so commonly been portrayed as Santa's workshop, the greatest difference being a general lack of order. Especially in the carpentry workshop I was struck by the lack of order and saftey precaution among dangerous machienes like table saws. I suppressed this initial reaction to a degree trying to look at the scene from a different perspective and reminding myself that this is the system that had worked for the coorperativa for years. At my second day of work I was talking to a group of kids when the instructor of the carpentry class walked by holding his left hand with his right, both red with blood. Turns out he cut off the top third of his middle finger. One my third day I went with Mario, the director, to check on the instructor at his house. He seemed to be doing ok. His hand was wrapped and elevated and all his sisters sat around his bed. Everyone´s greatest concern was that of a fear of infection. Since he could not afford the appropriate medications the coorperativa paid for everything. For an organization thats major problem is a lack of funds and resources, this was hard for them to do.

The four people that run the coorperativa are the director Mario, his assistant Cylvia, and two other very nice ladies whoes names I can´t remember at the moment. Mario is the jefe. He is an overambitious artist who reminds me a bit of a mixture of Kramer from Sienfeld and Diego Rivera. He has huge plans for what he wants to do with the coorperativa which I feel are a bit unrealistic. Cylvia is quite a character herself. Every morning she makes house visits to ensure families have handed in all appropriate paperwork among other things. I´ve tagged along with Cylvia a couple of mornings as she walks into the one of the poorest area of Jinotepe with an umbrella in one hand to shield the sun and a clipboard in the other, incesantly appoligizing for all the trash scattered across the streets. One of the families we visited was of a girl who had not showed up to the coorperativa in a while. Cylvia was pretty blunt with her questioning and took back a dance costume they had lent the girl, telling her that they would give it back if she consistently showed up to class again. I was pretty impressed by the process.

As for what I will be doing with the coorperativa... I am still trying to sort it out. They have a plan to expand the workshops they offer the community. They want to reach out more to the parents and offer classes in heigene, nutrition, and english classes to name a few. The budget they have planned amounts to around 42,000 us dollars. While the have written out a great plan for what they want to do, they have not sorted out how they are going to get funding, so that is one of my tasks. Also, through the FSD grant compatition I have the possibility to create a small project with up to 1,000 us dollars. Since I am the first intern the coorperativa has had I don´t think they quite understand that I will not automatically be given 1,000 dollars. I am still trying to work this out with them. I will also be helping to give painting and drawing classes to a group of 8 to 13 year old boys and they want me to start teaching english. I am returning toManagua today for a grant writing workshop and I hope to talk to the FSD coordinate Mariana and sort out how I should organize my work plan because at the moment it is all over the place.

Things with my host family are great. On the second floor of my house I am living with 3 other students who are going to various universities studying international relations, economics, and science. They are all cousins and a lot of fun to talk to as I practice my spanish and them their english. The house is always full of family members eating, chatting, watching the news... This weekend the gettyburg group is planning on meeting up to explore a bit, maybe Chagutillo or Granada. Well I got to run and catch my bus for Managua.
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Saturday, June 14, 2008

Jinotepe

Our orriantation is officially over and I am getting settled with my host family in Jinotepe. Jinotepe is a larger city then I was expacting. It seems like a good mix between Leon and Masaya and has a somewhat cooler climate. I have also discovered that Jinotepe boasts the best helado in all of Nicaragua. Needless to say, I am pretty excited.

On Thursday everyone in our group was brought individually to our host families. Since we were coming back from the beach, Jinotepe was the first stop. In a frenzie to finish the ice cream I had in hand and separate all my things from the rest I barely said goodbye to the group before I was greated with a warm embrace by my host parents. My host parents are on older couple of 75 and 82. My host mom is a short, wide woman with a gappy smile who likes to poke fun at my host dad who in thin, hobbles a bit and slurs his words so that he is near impossible to understand. Upon arrival they brough me to my room which is on the second floor of a very neat and comfortable home. Between an open aired room on the second floor and the entrance area on the first floor there are eight rocking chairs (abuelitas) which I plan on taking full advantage of.

After a dinner of gallo pinto (rice and beans), eggs, and fried plantains, the three of us sat in rockers enjoying some quality nicaraguan novelas (soap operas). As we were watching various members of the family kept popping in. I have a feeling that my home here in nicaragua is going to be a very alive and exciting place. I am going to say in Jinotepe this weekend and explore the city and am looking forward to starting work on Monday.

Sunday, June 8, 2008

Beginning

After a two day orientation in Gettysburg the six of us (Tara, Kate, Megan, Domenique, Jackie, and I) arrived in Managua yesterday. It is the rainy season here so everything is much more green and lush then it was when I was here in January.

Before I dive into talking about happenings in Managua, I thought I would first touch on what was covered in our orientation at Gettysburg. In Gettysburg we worked with the six interns who were accepted into the Adams county part of the Comunidades en Acion program run by CPS. The six interns in Gettysburg have internships focused mainly around the migrant population in Adams County. In our orientation we covered different approaches to sustainable community development that we can apply to our internships in both Nicaragua and Adams County. Through out the summer all of us will be corresponding via an application on the Gettysburg web page. The group clicked really well and I am looking forward to having a base of friends to correspond with throughout the summer who are dealing with similar challenges as myself.

While the Gettysburg orientation is complete we are just beginning a week long orientation in Nicaragua with FSD. It looks like we have a lot of great things planned from tours of Managua, Ciudad Sandino, and Masaya, to discussions with various professors about Nicaraguan history, to a day at the beach to relax. I should also add that the orientation is being done entirely in Spanish. The FSD coordinators have maybe said two sentences in English since we arrived yesterday. I am definitely having to adapt quickly and am enjoying the challenge thus far.