A crowd gathers as the last joint of the day is placed.
Water! The workers rest at the end of the day, as the newly-connected spigot brings water to the house. You’re looking at several hours less of hauling water every day, which means several hours more for the women and children to parent, play, study, learn and grow and several hundred more desperately-needed calories that aren’t burnt needlessly. It’s a beautiful thing!
PIPED WATER DISTRUBTION PROGRAM IN “LA MONTANITA” ("THE LITTLE MOUNTAIN")-With Portillon wrapped up, it’s on to the next one! After checking out plans and confirming distances with some death-defying walking (this new project is in a CRAZY steep location!), we have decided to fund a project in “The Little Mountain.”
-This small project, spearheaded by a group of highly self-motivated folks in one of the more distant parts of San Jose, will serve 6 houses.
VIP LATRINE PROJECT
-Apolinar, community volunteer and foreman of the project, has finished about 20 of the 28 funded latrines.
IMPROVED COOKSTOVE (FOGON) PROJECT
-Manuel, foreman for the cookstoves, had completed 3 of 7 workshops before my departure and ought to have completed the rest by now.
This is Cirilia, one of the elder people in the community of Guanacaste, admiring her new cookstove. Note the soot-covered walls, evidence of her prior open fire pit that she previously used to cook.
Tomas and his family with their improved cookstove (and, if you look carefully on the left, their filter!).
AGRICULTURE
- When discussing community needs during the brigade, a need for cheaper fertilizer was very clearly articulated. After researching current practices, we found that a community agricultural cooperative (BRHIS) already exists and sells cheap fertilizer by buying when it is cheap (around harvest), storing it, and selling it when it is expensive at the market (during planting time). This reduces the cost by about 20 percent!
-Rather than create a new organization, we decided to support this self-run, self-sustaining cooperative. All BRHIS needed to provide cheap fertilizer to everyone who wanted it was more capital. We decided we could provide that capital (around $2000). I drew up a contract for the “loan,” made sure the cooperative understood the terms, and watched as the first person benefitted from the cooperative’s expanded resources!
The two “directors of the cooperative.” The one in the white is Manuel, a man I work with a lot because he is very involved in all aspects of the community. Note the “Rugrats” t-shirt on the other director!
Isiais, committing to buy his fertilizer under the new program.
POTTERS FOR PEACE FILTERS
More on this later, but for now….
This is why the filters are needed! These are Petri dishes in which 5ml of drinking water from different houses have been plated and grown. If the water is clean, it will look like the plate in the upper left. Two houses of the 125+ houses I visited had clean water like this. The rest looked something like the other three: Red dots are bacteria of unknown origin (earth, plants, fecal matter) and unknown health significance (without further testing to further classify). As such, we don’t know if the red-covered plate in the upper right is dangerous or not (but it surely ain’t clean!). Blue dots are bacteria from fecal matter, which are the most dangerous in terms of causing such gastrointestinal illness as diarrhea and stomach pain. The bottom left plate was typical for San Jose. This level of contamination puts it in the “high risk” category for causing gastrointestinal illness, especially in children. The water grown on the plate on the bottom right is, as my mentor likes to say, “chewy with poop.”
All the water samples looked clear, so unless you understand germ theory (a far cry for most people with a second grade education), you would never know your water was dirty. My greatest trial, and my greatest joy, was trying to teach the people in my community that their water is dangerously dirty, and that a filter could remedy that problem…
About half the plates also grew parasites. Look closely on the left side, a little over midway up, and you’ll see little maggot-like worms. These repulsively gross little parasites crawled around and gave everyone a good fright. I wasn’t happy the water was contaminated with these, since people are drinking this water, but it sure did prove to be a very convincing tool in educating how clear water can be contaminated!
This is what happens when kids drink water that is contaminated with poop and parasites: Look past the cute baby and the older boy in their one nice set of clothes which they put on for the picture and find the naked little boy inside the house (yes, you are looking at a house, in fact, a home to 6)… See his big, distended belly? That’s what a belly looks like when it is full of worms. See his skinny little legs? That’s what malnutrition looks like. This is what happens when you don’t get enough to eat… and then your worms eat for themselves some of the food that you do get… and then you crap out a bunch of your nutrients in your diarrhea… and then you still have to work like a dog to carry water and firewood to the house. This is unjust, and this is why I get so excited by the power of filters, piped water, and improved cookstoves.
SLOW SAND WATER FILTERS
Before leaving, I had the joy of directing and helping Santos, a friend and neighbor who wanted lots of clean water, build a slow sand filter.
Santos washes the loose dirt off of the sand before using it to fill the filter. The filter is the big blue barrel in the back, next to his house. His daughters watch.
The jolly white giant and Santos pose with our newly-completed slow sand filter. Here comes clean water!
OK, that’s all, folks. I hope you’ve enjoyed this (lengthy) recap of my last few weeks in Honduras. I’ll be here state-side until mid-January, so feel free to give me a call if you want to hear more (585-698-6077), or to just catch up!
Love to all,
Mateo
PS. "Gifts of Health: The San Jose Partners Alternative Gift Shop" was a huge success! Thank you and thank you again to all who gave a gift through Gifts of Health. Your donations will be wisely and worthingly spent. Thank you!
PPS. Great news! Lacero, my good friend who was diagnosed with tuberculosis during the brigade, is doing VERY well. It has been an incredible change as he has begun to improve while on medication. His face has gone from cachectic, empty and shallow, to full, bright and visibly alive. His energy and liveliness have made a similarly remarkable turn-around. The future looks bright for Lacero. Medicine, applied appropriately, is amazing.