(Photo Above: Blanca and Anahi cut watermelon for the Fiesta.)
Saturday, August 15
After the construction and medical team left Juarez, Timothy Purdy decided to stay behind with me to connect with the kids in our JCEP program. We dropped off the team at the airport and returned to the Colonia. Saturday afternoon was filled with visits to many of the homes where our kids lived. We disturbed many siestas, but were never met with less than smiles and invitations to sit and talk.
First we went to the home of Anahi, our second-year college student studying to become an attorney. I have become good friends with her family. Her father is now working on construction for a new factory near the Santa Teresa border, where a Taiwanese company will manufacture parts for Apple. We sat around the dining room table in the middle room of their Mission-Ministries-constructed house. He sent Anahi’s two younger sisters to buy us Cokes at the nearby aborrotes (small grocery store). Anahi shared her photos with Tim. Reliving her trip to the U.S. last summer.
Anahi has become somewhat of a big shot at her local church. On Friday night, when the rest of the team went to the local church, I went to see Anahi as the Master of Ceremonies at her church’s youth night. She introduced a very entertaining band, a young rapper and the minister. The whole evening lasted nearly four hours and the alter call alone was more than an hour. This varies greatly from our tidy one-hour services at my church. I am very proud of Anahi with her polish and confidence on stage in front of a large group. This public speaking will serve her well in her future career as an attorney.(Photo Above: The three amigos, Moises, Samuel and David after Anahi's church service.)
Next we dropped by the home of Leo and Susie. Leo now heads up Mission Ministries in Mexico. Susie is busy running both libraries and shepherding our thirteen JCEP students. They have taken in a young Tarahumara girl named Natividad. Leo is a missionary and visits the Tarahumara in Copper Canyon once per month. We conversed in Leo’s living room sitting beneath a big beautiful photo of their daughter Esmerelda, taken at her quinciñera (party celebrating a girl’s fifteenth birthday) a few years earlier. Esmerelda will be joining our group of students as she begins college to become a teacher this fall.
Within walking distance of Leo’s is the cluster of homes surrounding the original library, now called Library 1 by the locals. Juanita (11th grade JCEP student) lives with her family in this cluster. We spoke with her and her parents and enjoyed a baby that her Mom was watching for a friend.
In the back of the complex we awoke Angel (8th grade JCEP student) and his mother Rosa from their siesta. We didn’t stay long since Rosa appeared anxious to get back to her nap. She works hard in the Missions Ministries kitchen and had gotten up at 5 am to make breakfast for the team that morning. (Photo Left: Angel helping with house construction.)
We hopped in the car and made the short trek to Blanca’s house. Blanca is in her second year of college studying psychology. We hung out with Blanca and her family for more than an hour. Consuming more Coca Cola, which seems to be the hospitality drink of choice in these parts. Blanca’s dad speaks English very well. He has picked it up just by listening, reading and watching TV. He is still unemployed and Blanca’s Mom is also now unemployed having been laid of from her job at the Phillips ballast factory after many years of working the night shift.
Finally we drove down “Dead Horse Road” to kilometer 30. Kilometer 30 is named thus because it is approximately 30 Kilometers from the border. Dead Horse Road cuts through some bleak desert and is covered on both sides with trash, dumped and burned by the locals. The name comes from the fact that horse carcasses are occasionally dragged there to rot. I, in fact, had seen such a carcass last time I visited. (Photo Below: Dead Horse Road.)
We toured almost every road looking for the home of Jesus, our translator, driver and construction boss for the teams visiting. We finally found his house by spotting the gazebo he is building for his two daughters’ quinciñeras coming up in two years. This emphasized how important these coming out parties are for the girls here. Families spend a lot of money and time planning them.
Jesus’ house is the size of three MM houses all put together to make a very large and comfortable house. Jesus moved his family out to the desolate Kilometer 30 a couple of years ago and was able to buy his land cheap. This before there was even electricity in the neighborhood. Now he has electricity and a pretty nice place relative to his neighbors.
Our visits completed, Tim and I headed off to dinner at a restaurant, La Cabaña, which had been recommended near kilometer 20. The place was packed with the more upscale residents of town and we enjoyed a very good beef dish with tortillas, cheese and spices. With drinks the whole meal was $20. We brought back the sizable leftovers for our guard at the team center.
We ended the evening with a sunset walk trough the Colonia. Everyone was out enjoying the pleasant evening. We spotted a knot of people down the street and as we approached we saw Leo sitting outside surrounded by lots of folks. He was holding court and enjoying the evening. We chatted for a while before returning to the team center for the evening.
Sunday, August 16
The big plan for Sunday was to have a Fiesta at the MM team center. We invited all the JCEP kids and the Leo and Susie Pineda family. But we had some time to relax before going shopping in the afternoon.
I woke up early and decided to have a walk through the Colonia early in the morning. I took my camera hoping to get some good shots and indeed, I did. Being Sunday morning, the place was eerily quiet. It usually teems with activity the whole day. See my photos from walking around on my flicker site.
(Photo Above: Juanita, Perla and Claudia on the roof during house cosntruction.)In the afternoon, Tim and I made our way to WalMart in Juarez. We picked up burgers, vegetables, buns, soda, ice cream and watermelon. The WalMart has most of the same look and merchandise as the one in El Paso. Except you have to pay 4 pesos to park. The portion sizes of items seemed smaller too. Maybe people don’t buy in bulk or don’t have living-room-sized refrigerators.
We picked up Blanca and Anahi to help us prep for the party and dragged everything into the kitchen. A couple of hours later everyone started arriving. We had all the thirteen of current kids at the party. As a big surprise one of our graduates, Marta, came with her son Diego, age 14 months. It was great to see Marta. She is doing a great job as a Mom and is happily married with a husband who holds down a steady job.
The kids played basketball and fusball while I cooked the burgers. When they were ready, Anahi and Blanca assembled the burgers In-N-Out style with lettuce, tomato and onions. Everyone seemed to like the burgers and most even had a second.
(The kids from left to right: David, Angel, Moises, Perla Lupita, Samuel, Anahi, Margarita, Blanca, Esmerelda, Claudia, Carla, Juanita, Edith.)
I spent time speaking with each of the kids. We now have the following kids in the program.
Angel – 8th grader at Mexico Libre school. His Mom works in the Kitchen at MM. Angel is a smiling happy young man who worked hard helping us build the house earlier in the week.
Perla Lupita- 8th grader at Mexico Libre. Her Mom also works in the Kitchen at MM. Perla Lupita also helped on the house. She is very bright and charming young lady.
Claudia – 10th grader at Mexico Libre. I call Claudia Miss Mexico, because of her dazziling smile. She also is really gets great marks in school. (Photo Left: Claudia at construction site.)
Margarita – 10th grader at Mexico Libre. Margarita is quiet and intense. A very good student.
David – 10th grader at Mexico Libre. One of the three Amigos, David is a very good athlete and cleaned everyone’s clock in Fusball too.
Moises – 10th grader at Mexico Libre. Another Amigo, Moises is one of our standout English learners. He is always quick to engage in conversation and is quite confident.
Samuel – 10th grader, Mexico Libre. Samuel is quiet. But he gets the best grades of the bunch and Joel, the English teacher tells me he is the best at English as well.
Edith – 10th grader at new school. Edith just moved a little down the road and is attending a new high school that I do not know. I hope to see it next time I am in Juarez.
Juanita – 11th grader, Esperanza public school. Juanita has been in our program since the start, she would be our first kid to go through all 6 upper grades to graduation with our program. (Photo Left: Juanita on Slide)
Carla – 12th grader Mexico Libre. Carla is only in her second year in our program, but she is doing very well in English classes. She hopes to go to college next year.
Esmerelda – Freshman in teachers college. Esmerelda is Susie and Leo’s daughter. This is her first year in our program.
Blanca – 2nd year at Centro Cultural University de Cuidad Juarez. Blanca is studying psychology. She has been getting 9’s and 10’s on the 1 to 10 grading scale they use in Juarez. Blanca has become very conversational in English since her trip to the U.S. last summer.
Anahi – 2nd year at Centro Cultural University de Cuidad Juarez. Anahi is studying to become an attorney. She wants to work in the Colonia after graduation to help her people. Anahi has become a public speaker, leading youth worship services at church in front of 300 people. Her English is conversational after her immersion trip last summer.
It was really great to see everyone and spend so much time with them. Leo and Susie really are the glue of things and they are deeply involved with all the kids. Susie drives them to all functions in the Van we bought last year. We got group photos and the party went very late. (Photo Right: Margarita and Edith.)
I must say I really love spending time with these kids. They are special people and I am very blessed to be part of their lives. (Photo Below: Everyone at the Fiesta.)
SRK
Tuesday, August 18, 2009
Monday, August 17, 2009
Library 2 Up and Running Strong
I got to visit our second library in Kilometer 30. Originally constructed by our team in January 2008 and outfitted with furniture and books earlier this year, it is now fully operational. There are two librarian/teachers in the library when it is open. The hours are 2 to 6, Monday through Friday. Susie spends most of her time here since it is even more heavily used than the original library. (Photo above of computer classroom.)
The library is equipped with computers and furniture paid for by funds from an anonymous donor. The tables are rugged, first-quality new tables and the chairs are equally rugged, blue plastic stacking chairs. In the main library there are tables for the smaller kids as well as adult-sized tables. There is a classroom equipped with six computers. There is an additional computer equipped study space in the main part of the library. (Photo at right: Susie Pineda our librarian and JCEP shepherd.)
We still are adding books but as of now have a nice stock. On school days the place is packed. It even had students on this Friday when school had not yet begun the new year.
Outside, the playground equipment is holding up well with the bat slide, teeter-totter and the swing. The soccer field is dirt but is lined with half-buried tires for a boundary. (Photo below: The Bat Slide with JCEP van a Library 2 in the background.)
Next to the library is the house we built last year for the family to watch over the library. So far the security has worked well. The government installed a four-headed overhead streetlight to help as well. There is a Missions Ministries medical clinic on the site as well. It is staffed once per week by a doctor from Juarez. (Photo below: Story time at the new library.)
The whole complex is right next door to the local primary school and is within a short walk of the kindergarten as well. I am assured it has been a great blessing to the area and has become somewhat of a community center.
Thanks to all that have supported JCEP and this effort. You have blessed many families in this poor community. (Photo Below: The tires surround the soccer field.)
SRK
The library is equipped with computers and furniture paid for by funds from an anonymous donor. The tables are rugged, first-quality new tables and the chairs are equally rugged, blue plastic stacking chairs. In the main library there are tables for the smaller kids as well as adult-sized tables. There is a classroom equipped with six computers. There is an additional computer equipped study space in the main part of the library. (Photo at right: Susie Pineda our librarian and JCEP shepherd.)
We still are adding books but as of now have a nice stock. On school days the place is packed. It even had students on this Friday when school had not yet begun the new year.
Outside, the playground equipment is holding up well with the bat slide, teeter-totter and the swing. The soccer field is dirt but is lined with half-buried tires for a boundary. (Photo below: The Bat Slide with JCEP van a Library 2 in the background.)
Next to the library is the house we built last year for the family to watch over the library. So far the security has worked well. The government installed a four-headed overhead streetlight to help as well. There is a Missions Ministries medical clinic on the site as well. It is staffed once per week by a doctor from Juarez. (Photo below: Story time at the new library.)
The whole complex is right next door to the local primary school and is within a short walk of the kindergarten as well. I am assured it has been a great blessing to the area and has become somewhat of a community center.
Thanks to all that have supported JCEP and this effort. You have blessed many families in this poor community. (Photo Below: The tires surround the soccer field.)
SRK
Aug 2009 Construction Team Trip Report
Duane Clapp and Hardwin Mead led sixteen folks, your author included, for a trip to build a house and staff the medical clinic in the Colonias outside of Ciudad Juarez, Mexico. We were hosted by our friends at Missions Ministries. They run the construction teams and medical clinic. (Photo above: The construction team, JCEP kids that helped in construction and the family receiving the just completed home.)
After flying into El Paso on Southwest Airlines on Wednesday, we boarded vans for the trip across the border to the Colonias. The recent drug wars in Juarez don’t seem to have touched the Colonias. Outside of a few military checkpoints, the Colonias seem as bustling and crowded as ever. Walking outside in the streets one evening, the people were out in force welcoming us and sharing stories.
On Thursday morning we rose early and after a hearty breakfast at the Mission Ministries team center, began the construction. We built for a family of four who lived within a short drive of the center. The father, Baltasar, was just home from his night shift job as a security guard for Pemex, the Mexican oil monopoly. The mother Veronica and daughter Karen, 17 and Michelle, 10 pitched in pounding nails with our team. (Photo below: The team tilts up the first completed wall.)
We were also joined by five of the kids from the Juarez Children’s Educations Program (JCEP), our scholarship programs for Junior High, High School and college students. Our twelve-person construction team was relatively small, but with the extra help we got the walls tilted up within two hours. The roof was on by noon and we insulated and dry-walled the inside before 1:30, only five hours after we began!
While we were building, our medical team was seeing twenty-five families with a total of nearly eighty patients. The team was headed by Hardwin Mead. Nurse PJ Meys and medical students Ben Murray and Timothy Purdy completed our team. They were assisted by two translators and two staff members from Mission Ministries. Dave McCombs, President of Mission Ministries and his wife Judy also worked the clinic and pharmacy. (Photo Below: Hardwin Mead and our translator Joel, consult with an expectant mother before an ultrasound.)
Following another big dinner, Leo Pineda, the director of operations for Mission Ministries in Juarez told us his exciting trips to serve the Tarahumara Indians in the remote Copper Canyon of Mexico.
Day two again started early with devotionals and breakfast. We painted the house inside and out. Normally, we don’t finish the drywall the first day and cannot paint the inside, but this time we got it done. The keys were turned over by noon in a tearful and joyful presentation to the family. Marina Clapp and Debbie Scalero had purchased house-warming gifts for the family, on behalf of the team. The rugs, housewares and curtains made excellent gifts to get the home outfitted. The medical team took a break from treating another large group of patients to help dedicate the house.
I want to thank our construction team, for their hard work: our fearless leader Duane Clapp, Marina Clapp, Steve Schlepper, Nick and Debbie Scalero, Winslow Yee and his amazing twelve-year old son Everett, Richard Wolke, Austin Mead, Rex “the drywall lifter” Finato and Brian Mead, my fellow ceiling insulation installer. We were all led be Jesus, our construction manager and driver on the team and Bill Orange our long time collaborator on all things Juarez. I should also mention that the MM team of local construction experts was there as well, tackling some of the tough things like drywall cuts and electrical wiring.(Photo Below: A family staying at the women's shelter.)
In the evening the team headed out after dinner to church service with the family. Ben gave his testimony in Spanish. A very tired group returned back to the team center for an early turn-in.
On Saturday, the team returned to California having never spent a better four days. Tim and I stayed behind to tackle a few JCEP chores. More on that in my next blog.
I have some final thoughts I would like to share. Most years, Missions Ministries (MM) hosts 35 to 45 teams in Juarez to build as many as 65 houses. They also have helped JCEP build two Libraries and have constructed many churches. They have been severely hampered by a downturn in the number teams traveling to Juarez this past year. The biggest factor is fear of the recent drug-war casualties near the U.S-Mexico Border. I have been down twice this year and have never felt safer. We do not work in Ciudad Juarez, but in the Colonias (poor villages) some twenty miles southwest of the city. We travel around the city to get to the Colonias passing through the Santa Teresa, New Mexico port of entry. The Mexican army has several checkpoints and has been instrumental in cleaning up the police force and gangs.
If you feel called to serve others, there is no better way to do it in such a short time commitment and for so little money. Please contact me if you would like to join a team or receive more information. We need to get back off the sidelines and start supporting this great cause once more. (Photo Below: The Family getting the keys to their new home from Duane Clapp.)
SRK
After flying into El Paso on Southwest Airlines on Wednesday, we boarded vans for the trip across the border to the Colonias. The recent drug wars in Juarez don’t seem to have touched the Colonias. Outside of a few military checkpoints, the Colonias seem as bustling and crowded as ever. Walking outside in the streets one evening, the people were out in force welcoming us and sharing stories.
On Thursday morning we rose early and after a hearty breakfast at the Mission Ministries team center, began the construction. We built for a family of four who lived within a short drive of the center. The father, Baltasar, was just home from his night shift job as a security guard for Pemex, the Mexican oil monopoly. The mother Veronica and daughter Karen, 17 and Michelle, 10 pitched in pounding nails with our team. (Photo below: The team tilts up the first completed wall.)
We were also joined by five of the kids from the Juarez Children’s Educations Program (JCEP), our scholarship programs for Junior High, High School and college students. Our twelve-person construction team was relatively small, but with the extra help we got the walls tilted up within two hours. The roof was on by noon and we insulated and dry-walled the inside before 1:30, only five hours after we began!
While we were building, our medical team was seeing twenty-five families with a total of nearly eighty patients. The team was headed by Hardwin Mead. Nurse PJ Meys and medical students Ben Murray and Timothy Purdy completed our team. They were assisted by two translators and two staff members from Mission Ministries. Dave McCombs, President of Mission Ministries and his wife Judy also worked the clinic and pharmacy. (Photo Below: Hardwin Mead and our translator Joel, consult with an expectant mother before an ultrasound.)
Following another big dinner, Leo Pineda, the director of operations for Mission Ministries in Juarez told us his exciting trips to serve the Tarahumara Indians in the remote Copper Canyon of Mexico.
Day two again started early with devotionals and breakfast. We painted the house inside and out. Normally, we don’t finish the drywall the first day and cannot paint the inside, but this time we got it done. The keys were turned over by noon in a tearful and joyful presentation to the family. Marina Clapp and Debbie Scalero had purchased house-warming gifts for the family, on behalf of the team. The rugs, housewares and curtains made excellent gifts to get the home outfitted. The medical team took a break from treating another large group of patients to help dedicate the house.
I want to thank our construction team, for their hard work: our fearless leader Duane Clapp, Marina Clapp, Steve Schlepper, Nick and Debbie Scalero, Winslow Yee and his amazing twelve-year old son Everett, Richard Wolke, Austin Mead, Rex “the drywall lifter” Finato and Brian Mead, my fellow ceiling insulation installer. We were all led be Jesus, our construction manager and driver on the team and Bill Orange our long time collaborator on all things Juarez. I should also mention that the MM team of local construction experts was there as well, tackling some of the tough things like drywall cuts and electrical wiring.(Photo Below: A family staying at the women's shelter.)
In the evening the team headed out after dinner to church service with the family. Ben gave his testimony in Spanish. A very tired group returned back to the team center for an early turn-in.
On Saturday, the team returned to California having never spent a better four days. Tim and I stayed behind to tackle a few JCEP chores. More on that in my next blog.
I have some final thoughts I would like to share. Most years, Missions Ministries (MM) hosts 35 to 45 teams in Juarez to build as many as 65 houses. They also have helped JCEP build two Libraries and have constructed many churches. They have been severely hampered by a downturn in the number teams traveling to Juarez this past year. The biggest factor is fear of the recent drug-war casualties near the U.S-Mexico Border. I have been down twice this year and have never felt safer. We do not work in Ciudad Juarez, but in the Colonias (poor villages) some twenty miles southwest of the city. We travel around the city to get to the Colonias passing through the Santa Teresa, New Mexico port of entry. The Mexican army has several checkpoints and has been instrumental in cleaning up the police force and gangs.
If you feel called to serve others, there is no better way to do it in such a short time commitment and for so little money. Please contact me if you would like to join a team or receive more information. We need to get back off the sidelines and start supporting this great cause once more. (Photo Below: The Family getting the keys to their new home from Duane Clapp.)
SRK
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