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Madeline, #2
User Rating: / 0
Wednesday, 10 February 2010

Hello to all,

In the last e-mail I explained a bit about the harsh realities of the
community we serve.  Now I want to share with you what we are
providing to the children we work with so that they may have a better
life than that of their parents.  We are an NGO (non-governmental
organization) dedicated to alleviating extreme poverty though
education.  We believe that one can better their standard of living
and better their community by receiving a proper education.

Early in 2009, Alvaro Colón, the president of Guatemala, announced
that primary education would be free for all Guatemalans.  Although
this was a very nice thing for him to say, it still remains far from
reality.  Safe Passage funds the education of 530 children annually.
We provide the inscription fee, the uniforms, the books, the shoes,
the school supplies, and anything that child may need to go to school.
 School in Guatemala is only half a day, so the other half of the day
the children come into our main project site for educational
reinforcement.  The older children 13-20 are with us in the morning
and the younger ones in the afternoon.  Not only do they receive extra
help on their studies (which is important for many because their
parents are illiterate and unable to help on basic homework
assignments), but they also get English, art, gym, and swimming
classes, which I will discuss in a later e-mail.  We also work to
boost the children's self-esteem and self-worth.  They do not grow up
thinking that someday they will be president, or a doctor, or lawyer,
like children do in the States.  So we try to show them they are
capable and encourage them to dream.

One of the obstacles, Safe Passage, was running into the first few
years it was open was that many students we not able to dedicate the
time to come into the project and work on their studies because they
had to take care of younger siblings still at home while their parents
were at work.  So in 2006, we opened a nursery, la Guarderia.  Eighty
children from just a few months up to 6 years, come to our nursery all
day.  The education system in our nursery is based off of the
Montessori system.  Everyday the children get time to play outside,
well balanced meals, nap time, and they receive a shower and lice
treatment once a week. Shower day is every Wednesday, and the
volunteers always come back with stories of how some little ones just
love to escape and do a few laps around the cafeteria in the nude
before someone can grab them and wrap them up in a towel.

Please feel free to e-mail me with any questions that you may have.
Next, I will write about our adult literacy program.

Thanks for taking the time to read all of this and please send it on to others,
Madeline



--
Madeline Nordholm
Support Teams Coordinator
Safe Passage
Calle del Hermano Pedro No. 4
La Antigua, Guatemala

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"Fish Like This..."
User Rating: / 0
Friday, 05 February 2010

I grew up in Appleton, WI.  Every Friday my parents would go to the same restaurant for take-out fish fries.  It was originally owned by the Blier family, the parents of football legend and Steeler great, Rocky Blier, and later became TrimB’s, owned by the Trimbergers.

Their specialty was a lake perch with French fries, cole slaw, and rye bread.  The perch was lightly breaded and excellent.

My father believed that Appleton had the best of everything, anywhere, from medicine to schools to fish fries.  When I would come back to visit and we’d go out for fish, he’d always ask if we “could get fish like this in Milwaukee” and would laugh when I would assure him that we could not.

In the early 1990s, the lake perch population in Lame Michigan crashed fro reasons yet unknown and still has not recovered.  The lake perch served around here comes from Lake Erie or Lake Winnipeg and is expensive.

Today’s Milwaukee Journal Sentinel has an article about a new aquaculture business that has opened on Milwaukee’s near south side and is farming lake perch.  They are beginning to market it to local restaurants and plan to be up to 3,300 perch every two weeks in a couple of years.

Who knows; maybe some day we will be able to get fish like that in Milwaukee.

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Note from my Niece
User Rating: / 1
Thursday, 04 February 2010

My niece Madeline is working for an NGO in Guatemala,  Here is a note from her.  I will post more as she writes them.

Hola a todos,

So I realize I haven't done a very good of a job continually updating
everyone on exactly what it is I am doing here in Guatemala.  So I
wanted to start at the beginning, and explain just what type of
project I am working for, what population we serve, and how those
interested can get involved in supporting us.  But that is all a lot
of information to pour into one e-mail, so I am going to break it up.
Over the next couple weeks I will be sending out e-mails describing
different departments of Safe Passage and different ways to support.

So in this first one, I'd like to introduce you to Guatemala City's
Municipal Garbage Dump.

The dump is located in a natural ravine in the center of the Guatemala
City.  The ravine spans about 40 acres of land.  All the garbage from
the 3.5 million residents of Guatemala City and four surrounding towns
is dumped here.  Nine hundred and twenty yellow trucks can dump up to
three times a day, depositing (in our best estimate, but nothing
official) 1000 tons of garbage in the dump daily.  There are no
environmental regulations here in Guatemala, so not only residential
and business waste goes into the dump but also hospital waste, dead
animals from the zoo, toxic waste, dead bodies have also been dumped
here but much less now than during the civil war.
So why am I telling you about the dump? Because this is the population we serve.
"Guajeros" is the name given to the people that rummage through the
trash looking for recyclable materials that they can sell for a
profit.  They collect aluminum, glass, plastic, cardboard, burn
mattresses for the metal springs, salvage clothes and furniture they
can resell, etc.  They work in absolutely atrocious conditions.  They
are continually exposed to not only the germs found in rotting trash
but also worms, rats, and vultures.  The biggest health complaint that
we hear of is respiratory problems because the the workers constantly
breathing in methane gas, sulfur, and dust.  During the rainy season
the rotting trash formes a thick sludge. Guajeros are at danger of
being killed in landslides or sink holes since the ground they are
working on is all landfill, not at all stable.  In 2008, about 50
Guajeros, died in a sink hole, just fell into the garbage, and many of
their bodies were never recovered.
These people are working in the dump because there is no other option
for them.  They are poor and illiterate.  They come from an area of
the city where people assume they are poor, dirty, have lice, smell
bad, (all pretty true by the way) and people are hesitant to work with
them.
So, 10-years ago, a woman named Henly Denning saw this dump, saw the
children, and decided she would try and change their future.  Thus,
Safe Passage was created.

I will talk more about what services we provide for the children of
Safe Passage in my next e-mail.

Thank you and please send this and my upcoming e-mails to all and
everyone you know,
Madeline

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Last Updated ( Thursday, 04 February 2010 )
 
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