Workers wait to dig through trash dropped off in the Guatemala City garbage dump Photo Credit: Safe Passage |
Visiting a garbage dump in
Managua, Nicaragua in spring 2006 changed my life. (You can read about it here.) When I returned to school and life in Southern California, I vowed to do
something to help the children and families who lived and worked and breathed
the toxic life of digging through trash.
I eventually found an organization in
my own city that empowers rural farmers in developing countries to restore
their land and improve their incomes before
they’re forced to go looking for work in the city, often in the slums and
garbage dumps.
Last Thursday, I had the privilege of visiting a non-profit in
Guatemala City called Safe Passage, or Camino
Seguro in Spanish. Safe Passage works with the children and families who
have already emigrated from small, rural towns, to the Red Zones of Guatemala
City. Red Zones are areas where the government has recognized a high incidence
of gang violence and organized crime. Safe Passage joins with the mostly
single-parent families who live near the Guatemala City garbage dump. These families supplement their income
by working in the dump, digging through trash to collect metals, glass,
aluminum, and other scraps that can be reworked and recycled for a small
profit, including food that can be resold in the streets.
Children under age 14
are no longer allowed to work in the dump, but parents often bring home their
finds for children to sort through and separate to contribute to family income.
Many families live in the makeshift houses of squatter cities that lack running
water and siphon off electricity from neighboring streets with a tangle of live
wires.
On the tour with Safe Passage, I learned that the violence
rate in Guatemala today is higher than during the conflict. The physical
violence, that is. I’ve been told there is nowhere near as much psychological
violence or terror as there was during the war, but the injustice, extreme
poverty, and social problems that existed before the war, that caused the
guerrillas to pick up their arms and fight for a revolution, still exist today.
Vultures perch outside the Guatemala City garbage dump Photo Credit: Safe Passage |
Perched on the edge of a cemetery that overlooks the
expansive dump, I could see how such living conditions could lead to violence,
insecurity, and organized crime. Vultures circled above the sea of debris, and
I had flashbacks of my visit to the dump in Managua. Only this time we weren’t
cruelly rushed off to the mall to indulgently eat ice cream and feel awful
about ourselves. Instead of focusing on the overwhelming horror of it all (and
it was horrible), we were taken instead to see the good that is being done, the
hope that has become manifest.
After viewing the dump, we drove
just a few blocks to the new Safe Passage preschool, or escuelita, the part of the Safe Passage’s educational reinforcement
program that targets the youngest, most vulnerable children, ages 2 to 6. The
contrast was staggering. In the very same neighborhood as the garbage dump, the
preschool is a haven of safety and fun.
The Escuelita looks like any
other preschool. Kids were jumping and squealing and rattling off a million
questions a minute. Tiny chairs surrounded knee high tables adorned with
primary color construction paper. We even caught a bit of the day’s English lesson
and break dancing session, and man did those five-year-olds have some dope hip
hop moves.
Part of the Safe Passage preschool playground. The blue wall separates the school from the rough neighborhood. |
Everyday from 9am to 3pm these
kids who live in the roughest area of an already crime riddled city, get to
just be kids. They’re given breakfast, snacks, and lunches. They get a head
start on an education that will prepare them for better jobs and will open them
up to a world of economic opportunity beyond work in the garbage dump. Instead
of sorting through trash or begging on the streets, they are treated as kids:
they get to run and squirm and pick their noses.
I understand it can be easy to be
swayed by squealing preschoolers, but Safe Passage gets high marks for also
addressing root causes and following best practices in development: their
programs are run by local Guatemalans, they work closely with the entire
family, not just children, collaborate with and reinforce the efforts of local
public schools, and even offer adult literacy and social entrepreneurship
programs to help the parents of these children work their way out of the dump.
I think you can see that I was
clearly impressed. I’d encourage you to check out their blog and website and
look for ways to get involved, I know I will.
In addition to learning about a
really cool organization that I may be able to partner with this year, I am
grateful for the compassion, care, and patience the staff extended to us
visitors as we grappled to absorb such weighty issues. And I am excited to share more
bright spots and encouraging stories from Guatemala in the coming weeks and months.
Thanks for reading.
So cool! While I was in the Dominican Republic I was surprised to see kids going off to school at such a young age. I thought they should be staying at home with their parents and be allowed to keep their innocence, but then my host sister explained that school IS a way for the kids to keep their innocence. Especially in the poor communities where everyone lives on top of each other, the only escape from "adult topics" for those children is school. I'm now a huge proponent. Sounds like a great organization!
ReplyDeleteI know, I was shocked that they have kids as young as two at the preschool, but it sounds like a great alternative to the violence and hardships the experience at home. Thanks for reading and sharing your thoughts, Audrie!
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