Tuesday, January 20, 2009
I Don't Get... Eating at Outside Temperature
Wednesday, July 9, 2008
Close of Service Survey 2008
Aka : White Jerry, Dolce Hombre, Big Time, Mista Jeffery, Sir
Site : Lucky Strike Village (smallest 4H site)
Program /Project : Youth Development, 4-H. Started two youth clubs in the village doing community service, tutoring, and sports. Collaborated with 4H staff and PCVs to create national week long environmental camp on Caye Caulker; Paticipated in national 4-H at 50 events- a couple of leadership workshops, 2 youth presenters at poetry contest, placed 2nd and 3rd in football marathon, and were champions of the national 4-H Olympics. Club earned 1,400 service hours in 20 months
Secondary project(s) : founding Belize Swim Club, reading reinforcement, coaching Bball, Red Cross disaster relief, random stuff in village
Least useful thing brought to country : shortwave radio
Most useful thing brought to country : limited expectations
Something I'd like to forget : getting teefed on every vacation in CA
Something I wish I'd done :
Creatures I've found in my house : something about Mike T's beard, and scorpions and skeeters. And a 4ft frog snake
Belizean phrase I use most often : Alright! or aahumm or hmmpt!
Tropical diseases and ailments : Poison wood rashes, dehydration bouts, minor bladder issue and that's it! Booo yaah!
Favorite Belizean food : Escabache
What is something you will never eat again? : Pig tail
First thing you will eat when stateside : something over priced in a caffeine stricken and panicked airport
First day/night will include.......... : Introducing the Scottish bird to Indiana
Favorite place in Belize : My house
Countries I plan to visit in the next 5 years : Scotland, some of Asia, Middle East
Other countries I've visited while in PC : Guate, Mayheeco, Nica, Onduras
Number of times I returned to the states during PC : 2
What I will miss most in 6 months : bike rides through village and getting a friendly "Mista Jerry!," hails from everyone
What I will NOT miss in 6 months : surveys
Job before PC : Jr. consultant with the World Food Program
My dream post-PC job : Hmmpt I'm torn
Likely post-PC job : teaching English in Korea
State/country I'm moving to after PC : Korea
Most important lesson learned in PC : Baking soda can cure; AIDS, and cancer, if you keep it in your pocket
Things I did to stay sane : Sat/laid in my house and did nothing
Something I still don't understand about PC or Belize : Why some Belizeans don't believe in dinosaurs, "The Great American Joke."
One thing (or more) that you will not be bringing back to the states and why : Children or STIs. Cause I was smart.
Advice to new PCVs : 1) If you would like to gain experience to attempt a certain craft (i.e., teach, gardening, business org) spend at least two or three days in a site with a volunteer who is an expert. Your community should be understanding if you can sell it to them. 2) Sell it, sell it, sell it and follow up. 3) As Greg (PCV) once said, "never pass up a romantic opportunity." Too, fight involuntary celibacy with an open mind, confidence, moderate aggressiveness and be 'fraid not of failure
The moment I felt part of my community : When I toted a wheelbarrow on my bike and I shouted "I'm Belizean, now!," as I made my way through the village past excited and laughing on lookers including Black Jerry who was seductively dousing himself with water from a garden hose.
The thing I did here that I am most proud of : That 4-H enviro. camp on Caye Caulker was pretty cool (twice) / being here closer to 2 years than 2 days
What is something you will always remember about your PCV experience? : My late host mother
Quote that represents you/your philosophy/ or what you think life is all about : Balance is the key to most everything. OR "Mista Jerry, you need to suck your bottom lip, grab a stick, and WHOP these pikni!" – Cameron, 8, during a frustrating morning with our 4-H club while working on our trails
Sunday, June 22, 2008
Keep Riding the Tide
Last week Omnibus 2008, my Peace Corps class, gathered for its last time in the sleepy sea side district town of Corozal. At our Close of Service conference, for the volunteers who saw every day of their two years come to an end, but only in ceremony, as we still have at least two months left, we were briefed on; all things needed to be known about reentering the States, hypothesized about what exactly development is, told Peace Corps our two cents, relaxed, partied, said our formal good byes, and decided when we will have to defecate in a cup for Nurse Jackie.
The remaining 25, of the original 40, came from all over the States, from Maine to San Jose, some first generation Americans, green horned college grads mixed with professionals with various levels of experience (all now with a deeper appreciation of Indiana) came to Belize with an array of skill, a bounty of hope for humanity, and a sense of humor. We will leave prideful with much of the same spirit, though challenged on occasion, with stories of breast feeding women on buses, terrorizing village chairmen, maybe a parasite or two, and tails of our first pig tail or toucan delicacy experience. And lets not forget the occasional snake, scorpion, or tarantula who were wrong in thinking of our homes as their dwelling. We also remember our fellow volunteers, our friends, who for various sound reasons are not hear with us to experience our final days as a group in country and we miss them.
I have always been impressed by the skill set that my fellow volunteers exuded during the past two years. I have thoroughly benefited from them as have thousands of Belizeans. They were in education; training teachers, mentoring students, creating/reviving libraries, and were unflustered when 7 year olds contorted their bodies provocatively while dancing during devotion time. They were in environmental education; counting conch, preserving wildlife, revamping visitor’s centers, and handled 8 foot boas. They were in HIV education; passing out over at least 600,000 condoms, showing some teens their first condom, and were a friend to infected persons. They did community development; and are responsible for the first ever realization of lap tops, websites, and a community telephone in remote villages. They built a radio station, and are leaving businesses self sufficient with Maya women using the Internet. Finally, in youth development we impacted the lives (or at least we hope) of some 2, 600 youth, encouraged alternative ways of release, created youth clubs starting with zero dollars, coached them through a 179 mile cross country canoe race, and spent many days at camps (kyamps).
Even though we were; robbed at times, suffered through ‘involuntary celibacy’, shivered with malaria, were lost at night on volcanoes, and missed home, we powered through to see our projects develop with roller coaster amounts of success. Certainly we will leave at some point, but not after making a multitude of friends, once strangers that now call us son or daughter or good friend (balli), and finally, but certainly not least, we now know how to Punta.
And there were those hurricanes...
Saturday, May 3, 2008
Surprises at a Village Surprise Party – A Conversation
DAN: White Jerry!
WHITE JERRY: Good night Dan.
D: Hey what do you call a, what you call, well she is not lesbian.
D: Ahhhhhh, she is not lesbian but ehmmmmmmmm
D: She she she got, she got ehmmm balls, a cock, and ahh you know, a hole.
WJ: Hermaphrodite?
D: Yeah, that’s it. I try to tell these young guys in the village. They don’t believe me.
WJ: Well they should. They certainly exist.
D: I’ve done four, ehhm five of them.
WJ: (flabbergasted) Jesus, really…?
D: Yyyyyyeah.
D: Why is Jesus white?
WJ: I don’t think he is. He is probably a light brown skin since he came from the Middle East.
D: Jerry, you are white but we are brothers.
WJ: Sure.
D: We all come from Adam and Eve. What do you think about Adam and Eve, Jerry?
WJ: That it is a made up story.
D: Jerrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrry?!!!!
WJ: What.
D: Jerrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrry!!!
WJ: Ha, what.
D: Come on Jerrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr!!
ALL: SURPRISE!!!!!!
Thursday, April 3, 2008
Youth Need Not Apply
Lucky Strike, Belize - “Plantain chips, mango sweet, tambran sweet, Coke, Winterfresh!,” yells Daniel, 8, at the Belmopan bus terminal. Your eight year old is in second period Math while Daniel is earning a dollar an hour, maybe. Before the terminal he rose pre-dawn, had a bucket bath with cold water, outside, from a well, fed the chickens, ate breakfast that consisted of beans and tortilla, and caught the first bus to Belmopan, the capital of Belize (pop. 10,000), from his village with his father and their stock of snacks. After the terminal he will go home where his bed maybe a hammock along side 6 others.
This is unfortunately the reality of some children in Belize though, certainly not all. According to a report in 2001 the US Labor Department estimated that just over 6 % of children 5 – 14 were working at the time. It is legal for a 12 year old to do light work in Belize. I would be shocked if this number improved over the years as the country’s GDP growth, currently 3.5 similar to the U.S, has not seen much flux since 2003. The realities of other children are much worse. Other children maybe found begging for a quarter, “shilling”, in Belize City, chopping cane in the sugar fields in the North, hauling oranges in the South, or God forbid, skipping school to sell their young body to an adult male tourist in exchange for school fees, cash, or material items. A horrific scene when you consider 2.8% of the population, of epidemic proportions, is only reported to be living with HIV/AIDS and when the tourism sector employs 25% of the country.
Given the hells that are among us we must ask, “Is all child labor bad?” No. My friend Rahiem, 14, along side his older brother, can be found selling everything from mosquito repellent to bread, at the family’s convenient shop, The Black Orchid. As a store clerk he is immersed in socialization, math, business, and hospitality- skills that will only help him in adulthood and transition into the work force. Rahiem is one of the brightest in his class and the president of my 4-H club in Lucky Strike, the village where I live and work.
Unfortunately, outside of the home there are not many opportunities for youth. Many youth assist the family in some form of chores whether it being on the farm, sanding wood carvings, or selling baked goods door to door. Sport’s seasons for rural youth maybe a single game elimination tournament, if that. As a volunteer Youth Development with 4-H/ Belize’s revamped Outreach program I am proud of the difference we are striving to make. From chess clubs to health workshops; community service activities to environmental summer camps; and from pig rearing to competing in 170 mile canoe races, we are developing an atmosphere of positive productivity and fun along side our much needed Belizean adult leaders.
Being a Peace Corps volunteer immerses you into living amongst these realities – this roller coaster of experiences.
Recently I was heading South for a football (soccer) match and the bus I’m on arrives in Belmopan and I’m faced with a moral dilemma. If I buy a bag of plantain chips am I a supporter of a child trying to make some money for his family or am I supporting the exploitation of the child who should be in second period Math?
* The article presented does not necessarily express the views of the United States Peace Corps or the Peace Corps post of Belize, but that of its author.
Friday, November 23, 2007
The Last Thing You Carry
Lucky Strike,
Three weeks ago Edison aka Pulakeye, 16, of the neighboring village of Rockstone Pond went to retrieve his pet parrot, the one he shows off to tourists for a buck or two at the local Mayan ruin (or temple) of Altun Ha (which translates to rock stone pond in English according to some). The tree where the parrot escaped to broke oddly when young
Without a local cemetery in the rural parts of the country families bury their dead relatives in their own yards. Not the best for the water table should a problem arise but what else are you going to do? Once the date for the funeral is announced men from the village take their turn in digging the grave in the affected family’s yard, as the women look on, in between little (lee in Creole) tastes of local spirits. Stones unearthed with picks and sledgehammers are dashed to the left. Soil and white mal dust to the right. The men surrounding the grave- resting and socializing in between shifts of digging and tossing, pause for a brief moment it seems. Two brothers from the Herbert family are in the hole and going to town and making significant indentions into to the earth to reach the 6 foot goal. The brief pause is something like a salute to manliness. The Herbert brothers, Elvis “Dish” and Floyd “Floydy,” are two large men that know a lee something about hard work. You would bet bowling balls were implanted into their shoulders that were beading with sweat. But this is
The community spirit continues at the wake. Here the community of between four and five hundred comes together to listen to music, maybe even the country and/or Christian variety, as the men play dominoes or 'feetch', and the women make colorful wreaths of kite paper and aluminum rings. This is a chance for the talented ones show off their creative designs of kite paper flowers but no one is keeping score. This event takes place after dark and into the wee hours of the morning the night and morning before the funeral. Wakes are usually hosted at the family’s home though this wake is were held at the Red, Gold, and Green Bar next to the parking lot of Altun Ha. Snacks, bite sized tuna sandwiches on white bread and the local rum and water mixer were again invited guests and, not surprisingly, served by women. A married one in tight black prints and a black and gold leopard print top of Spanish decent in particular either could not get over the fact that a white man was there or was the flirtatious type. However, the latter I assume was the case morality won again and is still undefeated. This was the first time I got drunk in a public setting in the village since arriving which is not a bad thing, even though I was still able to ride my bike back home and as they say here “the bike did not ride me.” The body is not showcased like a wake in the
The funeral was held at a Seventh Day Adventist church and there was not much difference in the way a funeral is celebrated except the pastor was 45 minutes late, the family takes pictures of the deceased and that it was hotter than hell for the audience dressed in black, grey, or white. I cannot say fashion is a big concern in the country as some even came in Japanese cartoon print shirts. Also, the pall bears wore matching outfits of the deceased being a white tuxedo type shirt and black pants, some with not exactly the exact fitting. And the casket was made out of mahogany. Handmade and bought from a guy in the City I assume. My friend Oscar Pollard Jr. helped to translate the happenings of the funeral for me as I was curious why no one was crying and why people were taking pictures of
The crowd then processed to the family's home where the casket was laid on two sticks horizontally covering the hole the men dug the day before including myself with blistered hands and a sense of being further integrated into the community as evidence. With the crowd huddled around the earth’s opening the pastor recites the usual. Sisters of
The traditional stew chicken, rice and beans ensued and tasted like the cook's emotions.