So this will be a little long, but so much has happened! And there are lots of pictures!!!
We have begun our village treatment program of lice and scabies.
We prepared for months by researching and talking to villages. It
was a really cool experience for me to go from research to a huge undertaking
of treating a whole village for lice and scabies in one day. It was also
good to use what I have learned in school about developing a community project
by talking to community members, helping them to catch the vision, and them
promoting it within in their own village. This is exactly what happened
when meeting with the community members in the different villages. They
were tired of dealing with the ever-present lice in their family members’ hair
despite treating and re-treating, they were tired of community and family members
continuing to have itchy-ness from scabies. They could tell it was needed
and were ready and willing to join forces with us!
For each village we divided all the students and volunteers into 4
groups, with supplies of trash bags laundry soap (to help treat everything in
the houses), ivermectin (pills to be taken orally for lice or scabies),
permethrin 5% (cream to be rubbed on the skin for small children and pregnant
women), and permethrin 0.5% spray (for treating hammocks and linens). When
we went for a pre-meeting with some community members we also had the chance to
map out a couple of the villages. I took
one of the maps and created a map on Google Maps (they have a really cool
map-making tool, under my places! - https://maps.google.com/maps/msmsid=212612183048058442542.0004d7bc8432d7f1c10d7&msa=0) I
divided the map into 4 equal-ish sections for each group. One community member went with each group. We will do our third village tomorrow. The treatment days make for extremely long
days, but it is also pretty cool to meet people in their houses and talk to so
many different people.
The Alcalde (village mayor) and me |
Garifuna drumming in Punta Gorda |
Girls in Eldrige - down the street from the clinic |
I also was able to go to Maya Day.
It was a great experience to see all the cultural events: water carrying
races, firewood splitting, cultural dancing, stilt walkers, and the greasy pole
(a huge tree they put oil on and raise for people to climb). I’ve also decided I needed my own Maya
outfit!
Maya Day - dancing and the greasy pole |
Traditional Mopan Maya Clothing |
For Easter weekend I had Thursday thru Monday off. A group of the volunteers and I went to
Antigua, Guatemala. Antigua is one of my
favorite places. I feel like God has
used it as a place of realizing more of who He is. In 2006 when I did language school there I
had never really been out of my “Christian bubble” and it was extremely hard at
first with so many “new” beliefs/people.
God taught me that He is really all that I need, but then also gave me a
heart for traveling and for those that also love it. Going back was bittersweet, none of my old
friends were there, but that same love and asking -what is next God -was
stirred in me again. Visiting a volcano
that I visited in 2006 was also a great reminder of the sovereignty of
God. In 2006 there was a lava river and
it was one of the most amazing things I have experienced. In 2010 the volcano fully erupted, now the
lava is no longer flowing and the area is completely black from all the
vegetation that was destroyed. The top
of the volcano is still active, but it is unsafe to go see the lava because it
throws rocks. Things can change in an
instant and it is so easy to take them for granted.
It was also amazing to be there during Semana Santa. Antigua is primarily a Catholic city, and
they truly celebrate the Holy Weekend.
There were beautiful wooden floats depicting the Stations of the Cross,
the hopelessness of Friday, and then the joy of Resurrection Sunday. It was a way I had never celebrated Easter,
but it was a great time of reflection!
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