Monday, March 24, 2008

More pictures

Waterfall in Ybucui National Park. We visited and swam for the day.



Group of friends that went to the National Park





Malnourished boy living in a rural area close to Carapegua



Woman and her common woodburning stove and chimney. Some stoves don´t have the chimneys and the smoke simply saturates the room. Other families have gas stoves and ovens, others cook on the floor with wood.




What is the Peace Corps doing in Carapegua?

Well, I have moved in to my own house in Carapegua that I am renting from a family across the street. It is big for one person with two bedrooms a living room, a kitchen and a patio with a huge mango tree outside. I even have a refrigerator and hot shower which is a luxury for many volunteers here in Paraguay. There is a two burner propane stove, but no oven so it looks like I will be frying lots of food. The tap runs and indoor sink leaks onto the brick floor so I have to dump water outside once a day if I dont want the floor to be wet. There are holes in the wall through the paint and I asked the family if they would repair them and paint, but they do not have the money for paint right now. I will probably just pinch the bill and paint myself in a couple of weeks. It is about a 5 minute walk from the center of town (with the plaza, restaurants, the market and many schools).
This week is a national holiday called the week of the saint which celebrates Jesus’ death and rebirth. Every family prepaires a special kind of bread called chipa because you are not supposed to eat meat or cook on Friday. I am still not sure if everyone will die easter eggs on Sunday like we would in the states, but I will let you know tomorrow...

In case you are wondering what types of projects I am working on here is the majority:
- Helping a national AIDS education program called 1X100. 50 highschool aids are supposed to help each teach 100 others about HIV and AIDS.
- Tree planting projects in the school systems
- Trash education in the schools
- Exchange program with a friends class in the US

Really on a daily basis I meet with teachers, principals or educators and help them plan class activities that integrates environmental education into their lesson plans. Every once in a while I will go into the class or organize a workshop with only teachers. It sometimes seems comical that I am giving advice to teachers when I have little experice with things like didactic materials, yet I have time to do a lot of research to prepare and just growing up in the US school system teaches a lot. Many of the teachers here simply write lectures on the board then the students spend the whole class copying the materical (not the best way to learn anything).

I am still close with many of the firefighters and trying to get them a new radio antennae installed so they can communicate with their trucks when they are out at an accident or at a fire. A tech. from the embacy came out to look at their building last week. Only one staff out of 35 is paid so they have no money to spend on equipment. All of their old equipment including their two trucks are donated and are laughable compared to American standards, yet somehow they get the job done. I am hoping to find a group who will donate the equipment to them, but we will see...


In the exchange program the students ask eachother questions and last time they asked me these questions. Here are the questions and my responces:

- Why is the government so corrupt that we can not send you things?

This is a tough question that involves a lot of history and politics in Paraguay. First of all, it is not just the mail system that is corrupt here. Pretty much anything that is handed to the government from other groups often disappears. Money, electronic equipment, construction materials, books, cars, anything you can imagine has been stolen in the past. Some people take things because they have little other choice to feed their family, others want money and power.
Actually this also relates to many of the people I know here in town. I have now lived with 9 families so far to get to know the people in the city. I will tell you a short story about the family I have been living with for the last two weeks. A few years ago they built a “panadaria” (a factory that makes bread) for schools in many parts of Paraguay. They built this factory out of bricks that were supposed to be used for poor communities in the northern desert of Paraguay called the “Chaco”. They secretly took the bricks and other materials from Asuncion to build the factory. After they built the bread factory, the family I am staying with was working for the government to sell the bread to all of the schools and the government paid for everything. The government paid $2.00 per bag of bread when it only cost the family $1.00 per bag to produce. For two years this family sold bread to schools in Paraguay while charging the government too much money, and the family made a ton of money. In this case the family got caught by the police and the father of the family almost went to jail for a very long time. It was later decided that he could pay back the money he owes and not go to jail, and today the family is still paying back the money they stole from the government. I am guessing that they paid people in the court and police system to make this decision to keep him out of jail too.
This type of corruption is very common in this country, from small things like taking a few dollars to feed a family, to big scams like this one which has a nickname in my town the “galletitas de oro” or the “little cookies of gold”. Yet the people here are not all corrupt, it is just more common and more accepted than in the US. For example, when this family got caught they were still accepted by the community. The mom still works with the government. The family is friends with many politicians including one who will very likely be president in a couple of months. To me the family is very nice, and do not seem like crooks or bad people, and I feel safe with them. Though the whole city knows about their scam.
As for not being able to send me things, the same type of thing happens. If you send something in the mail, if it is valuable a person from the post office may take it and use it for him/herself. 80% of packages get here though, so it is still possible to send things.


- How will you and us make cleaner water and take care of the trash?

This is another good question. People burn their trash here all the time! Not only does it smell bad, but it makes the air darker, and makes the soil and water dirtier too. At first I thought, I could just start trash cleaning projects and, with enough help, we could pick up all of the trash in the city. Then I realized that this would not be enough. If we picked up all the trash this week, then the next week it would get dirty again because people would just continue to throw their trash in the street, or burn it. Then I realized that we would have to teach the people in the community to take care of their trash to make a difference. That is one of the main reasons I am here with the Peace Corps...to TEACH as many people as possible about what they can do to make a difference with environmental problems.

- We are studying about recycling all of our lunch trash. Do you recycle?

I recycled everything I could when I lived in Colorado, and believe reducing, reusing and recycling are some of the most important things every country in the world needs to do. Though I do not recycle in Paraguay. Why? Because there are not recycling programs and factories here that will accept materials to recycle. This country is very poor and behind others in development and though many people want recycling programs here they do not have the money and materials to start the programs yet.
Though, I am still working with schools to manage the garbage problem. For example I am working with students to divide their trash into 4 separate bins: plane paper, organic trash (food), reusable glass+plastic, and “other”. This is to teach the students about the different types of trash and what we can do with them. I am going to show them about building a compost pile for the organic trash, and we are going to use some plastic and glass for class projects after we wash them. The plane paper is OK to burn if it does not have any plastic in it and the other will go to a dump. My city is luckily to have a dump to put there garbage. There are many places in Paraguay that do not have garbage dumps and simply burn or bury everything in their back yard.

If you all want to help me in my mission here in Paraguay you can do many things.

1) You can help me teach the people here about the environment and about what it is like to live in the United States by participating in this exchange, and share environmental ideas and our culture in the US with your pin pals.

2) You could also raise money or classroom materials for projects here (though some materials may not get here).

3) You can also share what you know about Paraguay and other countries with your friends and family to see if they can help.

Pictures March 24th

One of the two fire trucks in the city. This beauty is a 1961 doneted by the ¨Lions Club¨, which like the Peace Corps was started by JFK.
Another family member reading the weekly newspaper.....well looking at the pictures



Family I stayed with during Christmas. They played cards and drank beer all day.


Monday, February 18, 2008

Contact Info

New mailing address:

Scott Burgess, PCV
Cuerpo de Paz
4050 Carapegua, Paraguay

My phone numbers:
(595) 0975640110 or (595) 0982674097

Set up a skype account on the internet with a headset to call.

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Pictures

My messy room in Guarambare
Project 1X100 teaching kids responcibility, about HIV, health, etc.
Church and plaza in my town Carapegua

Life in the City

It has been so long since I have written that I really don’t know where to start. Sorry I have not kept all of you updated. I have had little access to computers lately and been busy moving house to house with only about half of my belongings.

Well since my last entry, I have officially sworn in as a volunteer and been living in Carapegua for the last month. The Swearing in ceremony was at the American embassy in Asuncion where the Ambassador invited us into his residence for cake and snacks. All 40 of the new volunteers then spent 3 or 4 days in Asuncion after the ceremony to de-wind from and intense 3 months of training. We blissfully ate at Italian and American restaurants, sat in air conditioned hotels and got to go swimming. The unfortunate part of staying in Asuncion is the tendency to spend a whole months salary in a day, which many volunteers did do.

After Asuncion, every volunteer went to their respective sites across Paraguay to have little contact with each other for the next two years. The Peace Corps is represented by ~160 volunteers in just about every region in Paraguay minus a few places around the Brazilian border which are considered “too dangerous” like areas around Ciudad del Este. Understandably all sorts of illegal things go on in these regions (money laundering, and vehicle/electronic/drug trafficking), though from what I know there is little anti-Americanism anywhere in the country and seems relatively safe. We do have permission to visit Ciudad del Este if traveling to Brazil, which I would love to do to visit the one big tourist attraction in Paraguay (Itapua falls, which, from what I hear makes Niagara looks microscopic). Crimes do happen to volunteers, though almost all are petty thefts and a few robberies.

After swearing in I moved to Carapegua, and am currently living with families for the first 3 months of service until I can move into my own house. I have already stayed in 5 different houses in the last month, which is good when getting to know the community but a bit exhausting when lugging your things all around the city, re-packing over and over, and having the first awkwardness of living with people you just met. Though the families have all been great and interesting. One family fed me horse meat sandwiches every morning and makes hand made blankets for a living. Another family I stayed with included one of my “contacts” - the vice principle of a school and 8 other members including an English student my age who showed me around and took me to play soccer, meet other families, etc. I also stayed with a single man who has 17 siblings spread out over the area. I spent Christmas with his lively family. Christmas here is 1) hot 2) filled with food and fireworks. Mostly BBQ pork. 3) the families stay up to midnight for dinner, then walk around until 5 am or so talking to other families. 4) the men in the family played cards and drank beer all day while the women cooked. I then spent New Years with a different family. What is New Years like? -See numbers 1-4 for Christmas.

Now I am staying at the fire department which has been quite the experience...they are all quite characters! There is a room which is like a hostel where there are three bunk beds and an extra 20 or so mattresses, no pillows or sheets. The firefighters (bomberos) take turns using this room when they are on shift. So lately I have been spending nights listening to 6 or 7 firefighters snoring. There are 36 or so volunteers coming in and out of the station mostly in their young 20s and only one person is paid a salary. To say that their equipment is old would be the understatement of the century. They have all donated equipment from various countries and two trucks (one truck from 1960... they say that they don’t use that one very much). They also have 20 radios but only have enough money to buy chargeable batteries for two of them, so when there is a fire and do not have enough personnel at the station they just sound the alarm on the 1960 truck and the fire fighters who hear it in town come running. Don’t worry, though, the head staff has guaranteed me that at least 3 staff are on call 24 hours a day and for a population of 30,000 in the city and somehow they get things done. 99% of their calls are vehicle accidents and usually come back to the station bloody. I got to go out on a call yesterday to observe, it was a small car fire, and I hope to go out again in the next couple of days.

Another interesting part of staying with the Bomberos is that it is attached to the police station, and I am not exactly going up to every police officer introducing myself. Heres why...the police in Paraguay have had a long history. Until the early 90’s it was illegal for people to go out at night. The dictatorial government reasoned that the people were plotting to overthrow the government. If the police caught someone out of their house after dark, or if the police thought you were secretly meeting with others the community members disappeared to jail and often were tortured into talking about their “communist” activities. Obviously this created a society that was very afraid of leaving their houses even during the day. Nowadays the people seem to be divided into two generations: those who lived through the dictatorship, and the new generation who is much more open minded. Many people, especially women, are still very accustomed to staying in the house day after day. So how does all this relate to me? Well this was not happening all that long ago and at the moment I am living next to the police annex where I often pass, talk to , shake hands with some of the same police that were police during the dictatorship and still when walking down the street many people won’t look at out of fear. I also walk pass the jail cell when I take a pee at night. The cell has a plastic Pepsi bottle full of water and a Styrofoam mat on the floor and currently a drunk driver.

On the bright side I think democracy/capitalism is doing wonders for this country, and though very poor and underdeveloped is changing relatively quickly. The governmental “reformation” as it is called since the Dictatorship focuses on education, democracy and the environment. There are many organizations that are trying to help fulfill these new governmental goals, but very hard to do with an extremely corrupt government and corrupt organizations.

So that is why I am here trying to do a small part in environmental education by teaching about deforestation, health, crop management, teaching strategies, and interchanging cultural ideals between the people I know of the US and Paraguay. As far as my work goes, things have been slow over the summer here (Dec and Jan) because everyone is out of school and it is usually 95 - 105 degrees every day...people just don‘t do that much in this kind of heat. Another volunteer and I are organizing an environmentally themed summer camp that will take place at the end of the summer. Then during the school year I am planning to work with teachers developing lesson plans at “head schools” that are in charge of the curriculum for 5 or 6 other schools. I am also hoping to be involved with HIV/Aids and sex-ed related projects during the year. A teacher/friend in the states and I are setting up a correspondence program between classes which I am looking foreward to. I have also been teaching English when there is time.

Overall things are going well and I am excited to move into my own place. It is nice to have a cell phone and get calls from family and friends from home. My Dad is talking about visiting in April and going to Brazil which will be awesome. For thoes of you that I have not been able to talk with lately: I hope all is well! I wish that I could write to everyone individually but just don’t have the time in front of a computer, but I do like the e-mails letting me know what you are all up to. Take care, I will write again soon!

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

January 16

Sunset in Asuncion, Paraguay
From our hotel after swearing in as volunteers