Guatemala Mission, March, 2006St. Luke's is conducting a return mission trip to Guatemala, from March 24 to April 2, 2006, in Lemoa in the department of Quiché near the highland center of Chichicastenango. Our first mission trip was in March, 2005. Most of the population there is indigenous Mayan. Lemoa was especially hard-hit by massacres and destruction of villages during the years of "La Violencia", guerrilla rebellion and army repression which ended just recently in 1996. We will be working with local people on two construction projects: at the Methodist Retreat Center and at the orphanage in Lemoa. We will also be running a Bible school day camp for several hundred local children. Look here for the itinerary. See puravida.org for more details about Lemoa. (Click on any image to show a larger picture) Our missionaries are (back row, standing) Dave Money, Mark
Ely, Gene Branch, Laura Richards, Laurie Gilbert, Joyce Carnes, Cathy Dunwody,
Kristine Fong, Betsy Keyack, Kelly Estrada, Mario Estrada, Dawn Branch, Carolyn
McIntosh, John Williams, Ken Fong March 25, 2006 The team spent all of yesterday traveling from Denver to Guatemala City. Everyone arrived safely. We spent the night at the Semenario Teologico Centroamericano, which we found to be a very pleasant and charming facility. Today, we took our "chicken bus" to Chichicastenango, where we will be staying while working in Lemoa. We arrived early enough to visit the Methodist Retreat Center, where we will be doing construction work. We also picked up many of the children from the orphanage and played with them for over an hour, helping them fly and shoot airplanes, fly kites, jump on pogo sticks, playing ball with them, and giving them piggyback rides.
March 26, 2006 Today, Sunday, we started by spending the morning at the Chichicastenango market. The shopping was fabulous and much money changed hands. After lunch, we visited Sister Helen and Sister Connie at the church in Lemoa, near the orphanage; they are trying to build and improve relations with the people of the area. Then we attended church services at the Methodist Church in Chichicastenango, and bought a few more items at the Ruth and Naomi Project, which helps widows and orphans.
March 27, 2006 Today, Monday, we started work on our construction projects. Half of the team worked at the Methodist Retreat Center in Lemoa, where we are building four outdoor bathrooms. Today we put together some rebar forms and poured the cement foundation for cinder block walls. The other half of the team walked to the nearby orphanage, where we are adding a second story to the new classroom building. We built rebar forms and worked on the cinder block walls. We managed to spend time with some of the children, but many were in school. Everyone is healthy; the most serious problems are a few sunburns.
March 28, 2006 We started the day by visiting the John Wesley school in Santa Cruz del Quiche. This two-year old ecumenical school, supported by the Methodist Church in Guatemala, currently offers higher-quality education than is available in the public schools to first, second, third, seventh and eighth graders. Many members of the mission team were deeply touched. The team then broke into three groups. One continued work on the bathroom addition at the Methodist Retreat Center, building a cinder-block wall and digging a long trench to connect to the septic tank. A second group worked at the Hogar Del Nino orphanage, continuing the two-story classroom addition and playing with the children there. The last group painted one of the rooms at the Maryknoll Contemplative Community (where Sister Helen and Sister Connie live).
March 29, 2006 Today, we spent the morning on construction work and the afternoon running a Bible Camp. Half the team worked at the orphanage, continuing the second-story classroom addition. We added cinder blocks and prepared for the pouring of more concrete. The other half of the team worked at the Retreat Center on the trenches connecting the bathroom addition and the septic tank, and prepared for the Bible Camp. After lunch, we hosted about 200 children from the Lemoa area. We played with a parachute, jumped ropes, told the story of Noah's ark, sang songs, helped kids draw on a graffiti wall, presented a puppet show, put tattoos on the kids' hands, gave them crayons and coloring pages, and played ball and sack races with them in the nearby field. The entire team was highly energized by the interaction with the children. The team's health continues to be generally good; there are minor sunburns, blisters, and gastrointestinal problems, but nothing too serious.
March 30, 2006 Today, Thursday, we continued our construction work in the morning and running the Bible Camp in the afternoon. Half the team hauled sand and added cinder blocks to the orphanage addition. The other half of the team hauled sand to raise the floor of the bathroom at the retreat center. We estimate about 300 children showed up for today's Bible Camp. We repeated many of the same activities as yesterday, with slight modifications. The missionaries particularly enjoyed the free time before and after the formal camp activities, since we get to interact with smaller groups of children then. We took up a collection a couple of days ago, to purchase corn, rice and oatmeal. Today, we delivered the last of these supplies to Sister Helen and Sister Connie at the Maryknoll Contemplative Community; they will be distributing this food to needy members of the community. The team continues to enjoy all the activities, but some team members are beginning to tire from all the physical labor and the frantic pace of the Bible Camp.
March 31, 2006 On our last work day, we visited the local public elementary school in Lemoa (located between the retreat center and the orphanage). We were touched by the children and teachers, and how much they're able to do with what they have. The classrooms are crowded and supplies are limited; we're glad we were able to donate crayons and 3 white boards to the school. The team poured concrete posts at the orphanage and prepared for the Bible Camp. About 400 kids showed up for the final day of the camp. Mass chaos reigned as we ran out of toothpaste at the teeth-brushing station and all the yarn for today's craft got tangled into one huge ball which couldn't be untangled. But we improvised and the children had a good time. Tomorrow we begin our journey back to Denver, with an overnight stop in Antigua on the way to the airport in Guatemala City. It's been a wonderful, enriching mission trip, and many are already talking about a return trip next year.
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