and the journey begins...

and the journey begins...

Saturday, January 30, 2010

Microfinance!

Microfinance class is going really well! It's a ton of work, but very interesting. We're studying the impact microfinance has on health, including going into CienFuegos (a slum of Santiago) and interviewing families who have received microcredit and the officers that do the lending. Pretty cool! This picture is from the day we had our first interview last weekend. We have our second interview tomorrow! And we get treated to ice cream after every interview...one of the best parts! :)

Monday, January 18, 2010

Orientation Week Complete!

I can't believe I've been here for over a week now. Orientation is officially over! It was a very exciting, busy, and fun week, but also emotionally, physically, and mentally exhausting. We had many orientation talks and sessions, as well as trips into town to explore museums, local department and grocery stores, and to learn how to navigate the public transportation. I officially feel comfortable using a "gua-gua", a public van that you can ride all over town for only 20 pesos! My first time on my own in a gua-gua, I was one of 25 passengers... traffic and driving regulations are so different here - there are none! It's definitely a thrill, to say the least... :)

Throughout the semester, I will be volunteering at one particular service site every Monday and Wednesday morning. I am responsible for paying for and managing transportation to and from my site, so that I serve four or more hours a week. During orientation, our group visited all of the potential service sites. They consist of an orphanage for mentally, psychologically, and physically handicapped children (Hogar Lubi); a tutoring program for neighborhood children (Sala de Tarea); a daycare/soup kitchen for neighborhood children before they go to school (Caritas in Licey); a daycare/soup kitchen for children in the poorest slum in Santiago (Caritas in Cien Fuegos); a hospice/nursing home for the elderly of Santiago (Hospicio); a public school in the slum (Santa Lucia in Cien Fuegos); and a pre-school for Haitian refugee children (the Batey). In spending time at these sites this week, my strength, energy, and faith were all put to the test! Ever since I arrived, I had been asking God to work in my heart and humble me and open my eyes... and He definitely did this week... didn't waste any time! I love it though. I'm already learning and growing so much.

Although I already got sick and it has been an overcast and rainy week, we ended orientation with a bang! We took a day trip to Playa Grande, a beach on the north coast. To get there, we had to go through many streetside campos and slums in the northern mountain range of the DR. It was about a 2 hour drive and despite rain the whole way, the clouds parted and we got enough sun to all get sufficiently and unexpectedly sunburnt! I felt like I was in paradise - it was surreal how beautiful the beach was and how crazy it felt to be standing in the sand on an island in 80 degree weather in January when I would have usually been sitting in Brandeis, eating mediocre food in Omaha with 6 foot high snow drifts... I am very lucky!

Today was our first day of service and class. This morning I went to the Caritas in Cien Fuegos (100 Fires). Cien Fuegos is one of the poorest slums in Santiago, who hardly ever see "gringos" or Americanos. I wanted to check out the Caritas in Cien Fuegos because it reminded me a lot of La Colonia in Reynosa, Mexico, where I served for two mission trips with Cor Jesu my junior and senior years of high school. I longed to be back in that environment, serving that community. I spent my morning washing plastic chairs, cleaning, cooking, talking with the women in charge, and playing with the children at the daycare. Games like hopscotch, Down by the Banks, Duck, Duck, Goose, and makeshift baseball games (really stickball or handball) are big hits with the kids here! I haven't decided if this is the place I'll serve all semester or if I'll try someplace new Wenesday before I settle down at one site.

First classes today went really well... but I realize now that they weren't kidding when I heard that the academics were just as rigorous in this program! I have TONS to do already... and it's crazy to think we leave for our 10-day campo immersion after just three weeks of classes! I'm in group three for Spanish class (the most advanced), so we'll see how that goes... I have lots of projects, presentations, and cool assignments to get started on - it's definitely going to be a busy but meaningful class! I also had my first Microfinance class tonight for two hours - this one is just a three-week course. It's a very informal seminar course taught by my microfinance teacher, Juli-Ann Gasper and her sister, Jean Holt. Jean is working on her Masters in Public Health, so we're doing lots of research and interviews with local businesses and families to look at the relationship between microfinance/microenterprise/microcredit and public health! The first class was long, but very interesting, so I'm really looking forward to it. Lots of work in the next three weeks though; we start our interviewing this weekend!

Thought for the day:

"Muestra tu Bondad." Show your Goodness. God made us good and He calls us to show this to the world each and every day, in our own unique way. This is a phrase that Padre Bill, the Jesuit priest who lives at ILAC and serves as the chaplain, is very passionate about. He preached about it last week at church and he reminds us of it often! They have t-shirts with this mantra on them and they are selling like crazy at ILAC with students and staff... I want to get mine!

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Casitas!


So this is a "casita"... baby casa... mini house that visitors, friends, and family can stay in! $33 per person, per night on site at ILAC... if you want, come visit me! There's plenty here, calling your name! It's surreal how beautiful everything is here... nature, architecture, people... God is clearly at work!

The "backyard"












These pictures are taken from kind of the "backyard" I guess, outside of the ILAC courtyard. We have the field (where we took the Pi Phi video) and then there's a track around it and a greenhouse, the "tetanus" gym, and rows of corn and plantains and banana trees out back! It looks like it was straight out of a magazine...

My gorgeous home for the next four months...





Top two pictures: views from the patio out into the backyard! The whole center is open air -- no windows! It is so incredibly beautiful.
The picture to the left is the Mission's church, right in the heart of the ILAC center. It was still decorated from the Christmas season when I took this picture. We've had mass once last weekend and daily morning prayer services/reflections in the church with Padre Bill this week.

ILAC Center -- my new home!


The first picture is the sign outside the ILAC center gates. The second picture is the bus that picked us up on the first night at the airport! It's ILAC's main bus. ILAC stands for the Institute of Latin American Concern; it's spanish counterpart is the CESI center, Centro de Educacion para la Salud Integral. ILAC was founded in the 1970's by Jesuit priests and is an international, Christian, Ignatian-inspired mission where Dominicans are employed and come in and out throughout the week; it serves the local community in Licey and all of Santiago, and has a clinic to promote preventative health and treat medical needs. It is a collaborative healthcare and educational organization that exists to promote the integral well-being and spiritual health of all its participants.

Orientation Week is HALF over already!

It's weird how the days are jam packed but seem to be long and go really slow... yet we've only been here for 4 days and it seems as if it's been much longer than that.

Orientation has gone really well. We've had spanish classes every day so our professor can split us up into three groups depending on our skill level. In class the past two days, we've learned the vocab for playing dominoes (a very popular game here!), sang songs in spanish, and learned the two main dances here: La Bachata y El Merengue. They are so fun! Tonight, we had a huge barbeque/dance in the dining hall with the Encuentro group and the 20+ Dominican staff members here... it was so fun! We danced for over an hour after dinner... with fellow students and Dominicans! It has been so fun to learn a new dance; we are all really excited to go out throughout the semester so we can dance more at restaurants and bars that have live music!

As many of you know, Haiti experienced the most massive earthquake in its history a few days ago... I encourage you to keep Haiti and the people it affected in your thoughts and prayers... tonight at dinner, Padre Bill (the Jesuit priest who is the chaplain at ILAC) mentioned that although they don't know yet, estimates say that more than half a million Haitians have died from the quake. Unfortunately, Haiti doesn't have national building codes, and so many of the structures, including a major hospital, government buildings, and the president's palace. Although we are hundreds of miles away from Port-au-Prince, Haiti (where the earthquake's epicenter was near), we definitely felt its tremors. I was sitting in a chair reading a book on the patio and Camille was reading on the couch next to me and I though someone was shaking my chair from behind and so I stopped reading and turned around and no one was there. Camille looked up and then I realized the entire concrete structure of the ILAC center was gently swaying back and forth. It felt like I was on a cruise ship, with the constant movement below, almost to the point of motion sickness or feeling dizzy. The floor was literally rumbling underneath me and the lights were all swinging back and forth. Although it seemed like it lasted longer, it really was proabably less than a minute or so. So it was definitely eye opening and cool to have experienced, but a little scary too...thank you to everyone for all your prayers and concern.

Let's see... what have I been up to in the past few days? We've had many talks and discussions as part of our orientation... student life, how to play Dominican dominoes (a huge pasttime in the campos, especially), rules of ILAC, how to become culturally intelligent, introduction to our microfinance course, spanish classes, EDP course (Encuentro Dominicano Program course: history, theology, and economy of the DR and the Caribbean) introduction, reflections on "who am I?" and more.

We have started exploring the different service sites within Santiago this week. There are about 7 or so to pick from; we're visiting each of them this week and then starting next week, we will decide which one we want to serve at twice a week for the whole semester. Yesterday, my group went to the first site, Caritas, which was a soup kitchen/daycare for younger children to hang out at before they head to school in the afternoon. They love playing with my hair or riding piggyback or on my shoulders... also big into playing baseball as best as they can, usually with a cheap whiffle ball and using their hands as a bat. It was a great morning. After lunch, we went out to Centro Leon, an art museum. The cool part about the museum was that there is a cigar factory there too, so we got a tour and watched how they make cigars and smell the leaves and everything! Only a few of the guys actually bought some cigars, haha. It was cool though. And it was funny, they had a vending machine outside the factory and the museum for El Presidente, the most popular beer here... everything is just so lax!

Yesterday was also Peter's 20th birthday, so we all went out for the first time on our own - 20 of us in 4 taxis! We had to figure out how to get phone cards to apply to the ILAC cell phones and how to communicat with the taxi drivers to get to and from our destination! It was definitely an adventure. We ended up at a nice restaurant/bar with an outdoor patio... it was so fun!

Small world actually... many groups from Creighton and other areas use the ILAC center and come down for mission trips and medical clinics, etc. When we came down on Saturday, a group of CU Law students were here. Today, a group of orthopedic surgeons came down... and one of the doctors is my doctor who I saw for the pain in my knees about a month ago! Small world, he'll be down here for 10 days... he said they'll service 75+ patients a day and do hundreds of surgeries. He said if I wanted to help translate for the doctors and Dominicn patients, he'd love my help... and if I want to be an orthopedic surgeon, he'd pull some strings for me! Too bad Caitlin Chrystal isn't here :(

We've had lots of rain and drizzle the past few days, but I think it's finally clearing up! It's been 70s and rainy, and yet the Dominicans call this weather "cold"! I'm just happy for the green trees and flowering plants and humidity. Anyway, tomorrow we're going to more service sites... should be a great day! Hope all is well with family and friends... miss you all!

Melissa

Wild About Pi Phi

Video from the 7 Pi Phis in the DR to the Pi Phis at Creighton in Omaha going through recruitment right now!!!

Monday, January 11, 2010

WE'RE HERE!!!

So we've been here for a few days... and it's already ten times more awesome than I expected.

The weather is absolutely beautiful... it's hard to imagine a foot of snow and slush when it's 85 and breezy here. I wouldn't rather be anywhere else right now. All the missing luggage of people in my group has been delivered, we're unpacked and settled in, got a tour of the ILAC center, and even got to explore Licey (the neighborhood we live in) and the city of Santiago.

We had our first spanish mass with the community yesterday -- I followed most of it! At least, the parts I wasn't nodding off... I'm so exhausted! It was SO funny -- during the homily, a giant green lizard began crawling up the wall behind the altar... we were all secretly laughing... it kept going up and down the wall!

Sleeping has been interesting... not only do we sleep under mosquito nets (which aren't nearly as bad as I'd expected), but I cannot sleep without ear plugs... the whole center is open air - I haven't seen hardly any windows. So, we can hear everything going on in the rooms next to us, the courtyard of the ILAC center, the cars and motos driving down the gravel roads, the neighbors and their children, the seemingly millions of stray neighborhood dogs barking, and even music blasting from far off. It has definitely been an adjustment!

The food is very different, but so great! Fresh pineapple is a staple at every meal (MMM!) as are beans and rice, of course. I tend to pass over the meats, surprising as it is. But I tried pork (I think?) at lunch yesterday and it was decent... For the times I'm hungry between meals, I have scooby doo fruit snacks, and my favorite pretzels and poptarts, of course. My suitcase was 5 pounds overweight, so I got rid of some clothes, not the food! Haha.

Also, one of the big problems here is electricity... so far, the power has gone out both nights we've been here... a recurrent event here, I hear. The system has become a sort of monopoly, so it is corrupt, and on top of that, many people neglect to pay their bills. So, flashlights are a must because I've had to shower in the dark twice now! Side note: Dad, DEFINITELY a smart move to get the bigger, more durable one!

Today we had our first spanish class -- I really like our professor. He's a native and teaches at a local university and school. Should be interesting! This week we have a bunch of orientation activities... talks, visiting service sites, settling in more. Then we start classes and service sites next Monday. I hear we're going to the beach this Saturday... and the high is supposed to be 87?! The beaches we usually go to are an hour to an hour and a half away.

We've had lots of down time so far in between meals and activities... lots of group bonding, playing hearts, beginning to read school books, eating, dominoes, working out in the "tetanus gym" (of the workout machines and weights that exist, about 99% are rusty...)

That's all I can think of for now.

Thought for the day: "If you want peace, work for justice."
Hola from Santiago, Dominican Republic!