
Amigos Bring Hope And Help To Nicaragua’s Poor
PRISCILLA GREEAR, Staff Writer
Published: October 28, 2004
BUFORD—Gladys Rivas sat in an office of the Amigos for Christ
nonprofit organization that was wallpapered with photos, letters and
drawings from Nicaraguan children. She smiled as she pointed to the
“cuarto matrimonial” (master bedroom) on a computer drawing of her
future home. Amigos’ latest project is building homes and a school
in the new Santa Catalina community for her and others who had been
living in squalid shacks of metal and plastic scraps by the city
trash dump in Chinandega, Nicaragua.
“For the first time in my life I’m going to have a house. I want
it so much. What we need most is ‘estabilidad,’ for our house to
have plants, flowers, (a garden) to grow food,” said Rivas, 34. “I’m
very excited. Here is the children’s bedroom. Here is the master
bedroom, living room, dining room.”
The three-room home with an attached kitchen will be a treasured
gift for this petite and strong-spirited Nicaraguan who grew up in a
one-room house. She, her husband and their four children had been
living in a dark one-room shack in El Limonal by the dump, sewage
plant, a cemetery and a contaminated river. After Hurricane Mitch
flooded the country in 1998 the government moved her and hundreds of
displaced families there. Many rummaged through the dump daily for
food and survival items. As community members struggled to breathe
with the constant stench and smoke from the burning trash, it was
Rivas’ prayers to God and the Virgin and her hope to give her
children a better life that sustained her as she struggled to raise
her family selling perfumes, bras and cigars for a paltry
profit.
When the first 300 families moved out of El Limonal in 2001 to
the Santa Matilde community she stayed behind, fearing life wouldn’t
be better than the rent-free shacks, and waited to see if those who
left had found decent living conditions. It was in the depths of
that pain that she grew in faith and found her mission to lead about
120 other families, as mayor of her community, to their new homes at
Villa Catalina; this past May they were moved into temporary
“champas” (shelters) on the site. Now they are all working with
Amigos for Christ to build their permanent homes, feeding center and
school and tend to their crops planted in June on their promised
land of Villa Catalina on 54 acres outside of Chinandega.
“I have to be the first to be working … the project of Santa
Catalina is God’s project. We are able to rejoice in a dream coming
true,” she said. “The faith has joined us in Villa Catalina. Now
that we are in Villa Catalina our faith is even greater because we
know when we ask with a lot of hope and perseverance that things
will work out well. In spite of all things you have to suffer we
still have to be strong.”
Her dream as a youth was to study nursing, but she was unable to
finish high school in Honduras where her family moved for two years
during the civil war. But now her dream is to help Amigos to
establish this community, and to see the children receive an
education.
Rivas spoke in September about her work on her first trip to the
United States. She had just arrived in Georgia a few days earlier
and was experiencing the awe of the wealth of middle class America
and overcoming the fright from her first plane flight. She and
Amigos Nicaragua operations director Lester Salinas, an engineer,
traveled around the Atlanta Archdiocese with John Bland, Amigos
executive director, Patty Perez, director of outreach, and other
supporters Sept. 11-26 to raise money and support for Amigos’ latest
project, offering area Catholics and Protestants a tangible way to
address the overwhelming global crisis of poverty and transform the
lives of the destitute poor next door in Central America. The trip
culminated with the first Outback Fiesta fund-raiser on Sept. 25 on
the Rock Springs Farm in Buford, which drew around 1,200 people,
where youth gave tours of a model of the homes Amigos will
construct. Those gathered for the event plucked price tags off a
“giving tree” with money amounts or items they planned to
donate.
“The Outback Fiesta was the best event we have ever had. The
spirit of the entire day was awesome. God was present everywhere,”
Bland said.
The Amigos organization has become a hot mission ticket in the
Atlanta Archdiocese, with many schools and churches becoming
involved. This year they led over 430 people on 15 mission trips.
Other projects at Villa Catalina included drilling a water well and
installing a pump and planting foods including yucca, corn, squash,
cucumbers and beans. The community voted to erect a temporary school
before the permanent homes in order to get the kids into the
classroom—some for the first time—and the school already has four
teachers for three grades plus another for older kids catching up.
They built a temporary feeding center and community members are
dishing out hot lunch meals like rice, beans, eggs and tortillas for
the children and elderly, with leftover food going to a new
community business cooperative, a collection and distribution point
for goods to be sold outside the community.
“The biggest problem is unemployment, and we want to do
everything we can to generate as much employment as we can. We’re
learning,” Bland said.
In all, their programs in Nicaragua cost over $7,000 a month to
operate and include two schools, three feeding centers, a medical
program that reaches 15 rural communities and a water drilling
program that has provided over 30 new wells with many more in the
works.
Families assisted by trained builders will build the three-room,
500-square-foot permanent homes, which will be made of cement blocks
and include an attached kitchen, a latrine and garden. Each home
will cost about $3,000. Currently they are laying the roof on the
permanent feeding center, and walls are going up for the permanent
school, with all work being done by the community. Other aspects of
phase one involve constructing a chicken house for 1,000 chickens to
provide food and income generating resources and a water
distribution system with a 10,000-gallon tank and distribution
pipes. They are now installing electricity in the new well to get a
bigger pump for the tank, a project being funded by Sugarloaf United
Methodist Church. Phase two includes planting fruit trees and
vegetable gardens, while phase three includes building a high
school, health post, church and cooperative building.
Bland said they have learned to be more efficient in distribution
of donations and is pleased with work accomplished this year.
Overhead costs remain under 3 percent.
“It’s going great. Where we’re at is where we want to be. We’re
building what the community wanted to build first. We’re building
the school and feeding center and our costs are very low for what
we’re doing because Lester is doing all the designs and engineering
work” and they don’t have to contract out, he said.
“This community is more united and works harder than any we’ve
ever worked with in Nicaragua, much more, and that’s a tribute to
(Gladys and Lester).”
Their biggest need now is for funds for the houses and for the
water system to distribute water to various posts.
“Nicaraguans don’t drink enough water. Lester’s father died of
kidney problems. To do construction work you need a lot of water,”
Bland continued. “Our dream is to have a shower hose at each house
and to grow crops at each house year round.”
Salinas said all the villagers are contributing to the projects.
On the medical front, he reported that the San Martin de Porres
Hospital Amigos helped build is doing well; between February and
April, 160 surgeries were performed and their dialysis clinic opened
in July, with five patients going regularly. They also recently sent
down a team of general surgeons in September and another team of
orthopedic surgeons in October.
Amigos began as an outgrowth of a 1999 youth mission trip to
Nicaragua by Prince of Peace Church in Buford. Amigos works in
partnership with the Chinandega Foundation in Nicaragua run by an
Italian missionary, Father Marco Dessy. In the Santa Matilde
community, where they first moved families from the dump, residents
now have three-room homes, lush vegetable gardens, chicken coops and
latrines, a health clinic and a school, with plans to start a
library.
The fiesta, sponsored by Outback Steakhouse, was held on a warm
and clear late summer day and featured artisans selling items
including hand-carved wood Nicaraguan crafts and ceramic clay pieces
by Bland’s wife, Sabrina. Music was provided by groups including
Cottnfish, Banks & Shane, Chris’ Acoustical Chaos, Chip Houston,
The Lemon Cigarette, Semolina Pilchard Band and Latin D.J. Claudio
Di Pietro.
It was a tranquil setting, near a large pond on which a white
duck leisurely floated. Many attending the event wore stickers
reading, “I helped build Villa Catalina.” They chatted and shared
stories with mission trip friends, and took a shot at their favorite
priest in the dunk tank. One long-term volunteer Debbie Thompson,
who worked for 20 years for the Salvation Army, drove all the way
from Wisconsin. She helped this year with projects in education and
health care, including AIDS, pregnancy prevention and personal
hygiene.
“I just fell in love with the quality of work they do, the kind
of people they are, mission trips that come down.”
Ashley Newman, 14, was one of the youth giving tours of the model
house, complete with a wash board and grill outside and a goat tied
to a fence. Inside in one of the bedrooms was a cot and chair with a
teddy bear and “El Cuento de Ferdinando” children’s book. Newman
explained that “children take buckets and fill them with water
because they have no running water or electricity.”
She pointed to a picture of one little shirtless girl who looked
haggard and depressed at the dump and then to another of her looking
healthier at Santa Catalina.
Newman has been to Nicaragua with Amigos, with her parents and
brother, and they plan to go next year. She thinks the progress made
this year in Santa Catalina is “amazing.” Her trips were “a
life-changing experience. I just realized how lucky I was to be
living in the States and to have basics from running water and
electricity and just being able to go to the store and buy food and
go to school.”
The Newman family, who have also traveled to China and South
Africa for mission work, helped to organize baseball and soccer
teams at Santa Matilde and watched them immediately peel off banana
leaves from the trees for bases and use sticks and rocks as
equipment. When Newman and her brother, Weston, returned home they
felt compelled to stay involved, and decided to collect sporting
goods from camps, as some teams buy new uniforms every year. Her
mother, Anne Marie, said they have collected $17,000 in sports
uniforms and equipment for them. “The joy on the children’s faces
when they receive the used uniforms and sporting goods is priceless.
We thank God for allowing us to work in this ministry. It has taught
my children immeasurable lessons that they could not learn in a
classroom, only the classroom of life … With privilege comes
responsibility.”
“We’ve just been trying to spread the word about what a wonderful
experience it is and how much these people need our help and we’ll
probably go again this summer,” Mrs. Newman said. “It’s been a
complete blessing to watch their progress and see the people grow
and become more independent … It is just so empowering to see what
volunteers can do and really transform thousands of people’s lives …
It helps everyone’s faith grow because it’s watching faith in
action. To know other people care about them it really supports them
and gives them a sense of dignity.”
Her husband, Myron, added, “Before they could only hope for
survival. Now they can hope for an education for their kids and a
better life, one free from disease from contaminated water and
living in a garbage dump, the basic things we take for granted.”
As a small business owner, he has been very impressed with the
low overhead costs. So far Amigos has provided over $14 million in
aid.
Giving another tour, outreach director Perez reported that
they’ve started a consignment shop for donated clothes, which in
just over a month raised $1,000 for Santa Catalina. She had been
working as a computer system analyst before coming last year to work
for Amigos full time.
“I love it. I left my corporate job last year and said, ‘Adios. I
want to work for God and Amigos.’”
Amigos is always looking for schools, parishes and individuals
interested in collection drives and other service projects, Perez
said.
Veteran Amigos volunteer Cindy Wiley, a former teacher, said, as
she monitored the silent auction tables, that on this past summer’s
trip she was delighted to see the Santa Catalina kids already in
school.
“It did my heart good. I met the teachers and they’re good
teachers. One teacher I met graduated from college in Managua and
had taught for three years, and she invited me to her house. It’s
moving. I was real tickled.”
Gloria Whidby, youth minister at Prince of Peace, is another core
volunteer who has taken her teens down every spring break for the
past seven years. She commented on the remarkable progress, but also
on the urgency of the need for sources in income and food, as they
no longer have the dump to dig through.
“Sometimes I don’t know how they do it. Even though the children
get milk and lunch at school in the cafeteria, there are still
families who go two days without eating. For some they just have
coffee and a little bread.”
Rivas, sitting in a shady spot by Whidby, said they also want to
eventually start a credit union, and are also eager to establish the
chicken coop. She believes more opportunities will come through her
trip. At first she had feared the trip wouldn’t turn out as they
planned, but kept her faith that “this was God’s will, not mine, and
I knew I had to be strong.”
It was difficult to ask groups for help, but her friend Whidby
reminded her that “God says we have to ask in faith” and in truth.
She’s shared the message that “we lose so much time in material
things that we always forget the most important things, to give our
time to God.”
An Amigos missionary once told her that she was very strong and
that she had to carry on, and that they would go back to the United
States and become witnesses to their needs.
“That woman helped me to see that when you desire something you
fight for it with all your strength and as things come to pass
nothing can stop you. Nobody has detained me because God has given
me the strength—because look where I am. That same wind and wave
brought me a long way.”
By the end of her dream-like trip Rivas was eager to get home to
her community and share stories of life “al Norte.” And she returns
with gratitude for her amigos in Georgia.
“Amigos for Christ are the workers for God, serving the needs of
the hungry, the naked, those who lack faith, and those who can’t
even love. When you begin to serve, you know that God exists.”
For information on Amigos’ upcoming events and volunteer
opportunities call (770) 614-9250 or visit
www.amigosforchrist.org. |