Sunday, January 29, 2006

the laundry room

friends on the walk to francisco mayer

the entrance to francisco mayer

approaching the aldea francisco mayer

some of "las chicas" at francisco mayer

Huancayo--answers to questions

A bit of advice: this is really, really long, so don’t feel like you have to read it all!

Huancayo
Liza asked about Huancayo, so here it is: Huancayo is a city in the central sierra. It is a 6-7 hours’ drive east from Lima. Apparently it has grown quite a bit since the 80s and the terrorist activity of the Sendero Luminoso (Shining Path) guerilla organization. Huancayo is in the Mantaro Valley, so there are hills/mountains on at least two sides. The hills and mountains are beautiful. The city is not so beautiful—what cities are? There is a lot of traffic—lots and lots of honking. Most of the traffic is combis and taxis, with some trucks and private cars thrown in for good measure.

Combi Travel
I travel by combis most of the time. These are generally large vans or small buses, and they are usually in dreadful shape. It seems as if many are privately owned but affiliated with a company, but I’m not sure. Sometimes, I don’t think the vehicle is going to make it to wherever I am going, but it always does. It is an incredibly cheap way to travel, but the state of the vehicles really gives one pause. One rattled so badly, I was sure it was about to fall completely apart on the spot. Of course, the taxis are usually just as dilapidated. Within the city, it costs 70 centimos to ride (no transfers!). That is about 20 cents! I take one combi to work in the morning, and two back home, so I’m out about 60 cents a day for transportation.

Early Morning
Kim asked about my typical day, which I thought was also a great question. I get up around 5:45 (my alarm is set for 5:40, but anyone who knows me knows I need at least a few minutes to argue myself out of bed). Most mornings, Katya, the 15-year old in my host family, and I head out for a run at 6:00. We walk the few blocks to the malecon and down the stairs, admiring along the way the view of the mountains in the early morning cloud, sun, or mist. After a half hour or so of dodging combis, dogs, and the things dogs leave behind, we either take a detour so Katya can have a short swing, or we head directly home.

Living Arrangements
After showering, it’s time to prepare for my day’s work, and eat breakfast. By the way, I live with my family in Pio Pata, a barrio in El Tambo, which is connected to Huancayo, but not in Huancayo proper. Like most of the city outside of el centro, El Tambo has about a 50-50 mix of paved and unpaved streets. There are dogs everywhere. In the richest areas, houses have some sort of public front, but, for the most part, they are not made for looks. My family’s house, like many of the buildings in the area, is a work in progress. Now, it is one story, with the concrete stairs for a second story leading to what is now the roof. This is where Cheboly, the family dog, lives. My room is actually in a separate building from the house, with a dirt-floor, open-air space between my room and the house. This area is where we wash and then hang our clothes, where the staircase is, and where Chewaly marks her territory. My room has a tile floor and painted walls. The house has a kitchen, combined dining and living area, three bedrooms and a bathroom. The floors are unfinished concrete. A week ago, Marci (the father of the family), with the help of a carpenter and Jose (the son of the family), put up doors on the various rooms of the house. Until then, cloth curtains separated the rooms.

Water and Other Plumbing Issues
There is no heat, but we have electricity all the time, and water from about 6 a.m. until about 9 or 9:30 p.m. That means there is no flushing or washing for a good chunk of time every day. I don’t want to be rude to my family, or at all ungrateful, because they are absolutely fabulous, and treat me like the Abu they have named me, but I can tell you the bathroom presents my biggest challenges. I won’t go into detail here.

Breakfast and Departure
A little after 8, after a breakfast of tea and pan (bread), and usually some other small dish, it is time to head out for work. I walk about 8 blocks to Huancavelica Street, where I wait for a combi to Palian, the area where I work. The wait can be anywhere from a couple of minutes to about 20 minutes, with many, many combis going by, but eventually a combi to Palian comes by. I am really lucky if there is an available seat, but usually I have to find a place in the aisle to stand and hang on.

The Ride to Work
The combi winds its way to and through el centro, which includes a slow passage through the congested market district near the Avenida Ferrocarril. There are tiendas/stands for everything—bicycles, coffins, plastic items, fish, bread, shirts, toilet paper, socks, eggs, meat of all sorts, chickens (every morning I see hundreds and hundreds of plucked whole chickens, each hanging by a leg from a string or rope in the open air). Somehow, in the U.S., we can forget that the animals we eat actually ever had heads, but here that kind of forgetfulness is just not possible.

Aldea Rosario
After inching our way through the streets of the markets, we work our way toward Palian. On Tuesdays and Thursdays, I get off at the Aldea Rosario, a large (public?) orphanage for girls and boys from about 4 years old to 18, or so. It’s actually a farming compound, where they grow corn and artichokes and raise guinea pigs. There are multiple, one-story buildings, including administrative buildings and places where the children sleep. They have a concrete play area, where the children play futbol (soccer) and volleyball. I do crafts/manual arts there, and kids come and participate if they choose. Sometimes, there are just a few, and other times many. I have heard that there are about 70 children there altogether, but I’ve never seen even half that many. The kids are usually sweet, but pretty rough—on each other, and on whatever materials I bring with me. Although I have had a few good days there, I’ve had some really frustrating ones, too. I haven’t figured out my “mission” there, yet, but I’m trying.

I Left my Heart in Aldea Francisco Mayer
Monday, Wednesday and Friday mornings, I ride the combi a little farther, a get off at the Parque Palian. From there, I have about a 10 or 15-minute walk (depending on the amount of recent rain, and therefore depth of mud) to the Aldea Francisco Mayer. One morning this past week, I was stopped at the Parque by a very drunken man who insisted on playing “El Condor Pasa” (badly) for me on his guitar. When he was finished, he asked for a “propina”—I don’t think so.

Francisco Mayer is in the middle of farmland. My understanding is that this orphanage was started by Swiss (?) Methodists. Twenty-one girls from 10 to 18 live here. There are two women (called “tias” or aunts) who look after the girls. There is a director, but he’s not there all the time. And there are two older men who operate a wood-working shop on the premises. I love going to Francisco Mayer.

Morning Activities
The girls there are incredibly loving, to each other and to the volunteers. Now I am working there with only one other volunteer, an occupational therapist from Canada, Erin, who is volunteering with Tinkuy Peru (I wrote a bit about them in an earlier post). Working there is really satisfying, because the girls are so great. Friday morning we made scrunchies (thanks, Ann, Bill and Chris, for your financial support of scrunchy-making materials), and then Erin led a couple of games that had the girls laughing hysterically. Wednesday, we made “clocks” for practicing time in English, and then, instead of our usual English class, I was called upon to cut a few more girls’ hair.

Jessica
One of the girls, Jessica, had to have her hair cut because of the infestation. Her father brought her to the Aldea only recently (since I’ve been here), because her stepmother beats her. She was really resistant to having her hair cut, at first, but after seeing a couple of the other girls have their hair cut, she agreed. She sat there perfectly still while I cut her hair from long to short. The good news is that it turned out really nice, and she liked it a lot. The bad news is that, a little while after I had finished, when I lifted my hand to touch her hair in admiration, she flinched automatically from having been hit so much. Then she smiled and kissed me.

Our English classes are going well, but we’ve run out of time the last two days. We’re going to get back on track Monday, though. The girls who are participating (there are more and more each day) are working really hard and learning a lot.

Lunch
When I finish up around noon or 12:30, I catch a combi back toward el centro, where I often do a quick bit of shopping for the next day’s supplies and then catch another combi home for lunch. Lunch is always a big meal, usually with soup and then a plate of something, almost always including rice, boiled potato and some kind of meat. I think my favorite dish is “papas huanicainas,” which gisela (the 23 year old in the family) calls “Huancayo potato salad.” It is boiled potatoes with a delicious light green sauce and lettuce. Twice this week, I had lunch at Tinkuy Peru, another local volunteer organization (where Erin, Alison and Terry work, among others).

Teaching English
From 3 to 4, I now teach English to a class of 8 7-to-9 year olds at Tino’s school (Tinkuy). Thursday went well, but Friday I had trouble believing that I’ve ever been a teacher! I’ve got to think this through a little better, and figure out what’s needed. What was a bit ironic is that Friday at lunch we had a teaching discussion that I “facilitated” for the Tinkuy volunteers. The “seminar” went really well, but, then I guess that could be expected, since I’ve done a whole lot more of teaching teachers in the past few years than I have teaching children! I’m grateful for the opportunity to teach the children, but it is going to take some careful planning.

Wow! I didn’t intend for this to be so long, but time flies when you’re having fun. More later. Thanks for reading.

Sunday, January 22, 2006

an odd week and weekend

early this week i came down with an intestinal infection. yuck. i was a big baby, but my host family took fabulous care of me. there is some theory about "frio" and illness that i don´t understand, but i wasn´t allowed to drink cold liquids or eat cold food. after a lot of tea, antibiotics and loperamide, and a couple of days of rest, i was back among the living.

this weekend, my family took me to a pueblo and marci´s ancestral home. it was a great experience. we hiked up the fields (an unusual concept for most folks familiar with american farming) and along roads in the process of being cleared. we ate a great meal of soup, trout, potatoes and rice. i had a hilarious opportunity to fall down while helping chase a pig that had gotten loose.

today was a bit weird. i spent 12 hours finishing a rough draft for a book chapter. it was weird because i was living in spanish in the house, and thinking and writing in english in my room. my family was incredibly supportive, calling me for meals, and then sending me back to my room and "computadora" when the meal was over. i wasn´t even allowed to wash dishes!

now, though, i´m heading back home after sending off my draft to my fellow section members, with two cervezas to celebrate with the fam while i prepare for working with mis chicas tomorrow!

Friday, January 13, 2006

a week´s work

Hello. It´s Friday, early evening, and it´s been quite a week. I´m working with two sets of "orphans." I´m using the quotation marks because they´re not orphans in the sense that I´m used to. Most, if not all of them, have parents--they´re just indisposed to taking care of their children for one reason or another. There is the whole gamut--abandonment, drugs, illness, extreme poverty, abuse (one of the girls has a baby by her father--it breaks my heart). There are children whose faces have been destroyed by fire or accident, but I have seen no children whose spirits have been completely destroyed (yet). There are some whose spirits are very much intact, but have developed a world-weariness that is difficult to encounter in anyone so young. There are two I´d like to describe here.

One is Fatima. She is four years old and smart as a whip. After 3 hours working with a really big group, two days later she was reminding the older children of my name with a confidence that was amusing. When we were doing our activity yesterday, cutting out, coloring and pasting the pieces of a bear, she knew what she needed, she knew what she was willing to do, and what she wanted me to do. When she wanted to interrupt a counseling session with another child so she could see the counselor, no one (I mean no one) was going to deter her. She is so competent, it is a little scary.

The other is Roxana. She is sixteen, and as mature as anyone I have ever met. She is not what you would call cheerful, and she does not suffer fools gladly. I don´t know how strong she is physically, but I´m sure she could kick some serious ass. She´s insightful and wise and has a sense of humor more dry than any martini. If she were in one of my classes at Beloit College, I´m sure she´d outshine the rest. If she doesn´t get a chance in the world, it will be an awful waste.

I have been doing crafts with the children, which they seem to enjoy, but I am hoping to be a little more deliberate with the girls at the smaller orphanage in the 7 weeks I have left in Huancayo. My goal is to teach English for an hour or so, do a craft or some other diversion for an hour, and then do personal writing for a final hour or two. The girls really want to learn English, and I´m happy to oblige. I´m hoping they want to do personal writing, as well. They can write to me, or they can write with my promise that I will publish their stories. This afternoon, with a donation by my friend Diane, I bought 2 notebooks for each of the girls, and with the pens I brought that were donated by the Beloit College bookstore, Stanton Shoes, and another friend, Marion, we should be set.

Well, my internet hour is just about completed, and my family has given me a curfew after I came home about 7 hours late on Wednesday. The most interesting part of that story is that I was locked in a bathroom for about a half hour. Maybe when there´s a lull, I´ll write a bit more about that.

I won´t say where the bathroom was, but I do want to put in a "plug" for some great folks I have met here and have gotten a chance to work with. They are Alison and Terry, and they´re spending a year here working with a volunteer organization, Tinkuy Peru. If you get a chance, check out their website: www.terryandalison.com

Until next time.

Sunday, January 08, 2006

en Huancayo

Hello, my friends and family!

I had a tamale and manzanilla tea for breakfast! I am definitely not in Kansas any more! Life is good, with much disorientation and adjustment. My family is fabulous. We are having a great time together, getting to know each other. After lunch today, we are all going to a feria, which (I think!) is a large outdoor market. I will know more this afternoon, though, won´t I? The climate is great--what a change to have no heat and no air conditioning and be comfortable adding or taking off a layer. And the land around here is beautiful--mountains all around.

I apologize for the lack of interesting stories. I´ll try to generate (or remember) one or two for my next posting.

Tomorrow I begin my work with orphans. They are not exactly the babies I had hoped to be working with, but I´ll go where the need seems to be. Tomorrow we´re doing art! We´re drawing a picture, then gluing small bits of paper to the drawings--I´m sure there´s a name for the medium/approach, but I sure don´t know what it is! They clearly don´t know who they´re working with--art!! I´ll bet I get transfered to another subject the next day!

Take care all, and keep thoughts and prayers coming!

Wednesday, January 04, 2006

Lima

Hi, there.

I´ve been in Lima all day, preparing for my bus trip to Huancayo in the morning. I´m taking the highly-recommended Cruz del Sur bus, which takes about 7 hours and goes from Lima (at sea level) to Huancayo (up in the Andes). I´m going on the morning bus to get a better idea of the landscape (and the distance from Lima). I arrived early this morning into Lima on a flight from Miami, and time has been "funny" all day, as I´ve been taking it very easy at Mami Panchita Hostal (which I recommend, by the way).

My "semi-fast" today has consisted of two cups of tea, two small bread rolls, many glasses of water, and, just for fun, a handful of m-and-m´s. I´m hoping for a less acute case of altitude sickness this time.

On a sad note, my family is preparing for the loss of my Aunt Peggy, a woman with a big heart, a no-nonsense atitude, and the bold spirit of an adventurer. I hope she will be with me in spirit, as she is a companion whose company I would very much appreciate.

That´s all for today.