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Fair Trade and Fair Politics in Guatemala

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If you are in or around the Madison area, please come to this event!

The Guatemalan Dream: Fair Trade and Fair Politics
DESGUA Speaker in Madison
Monday, March 15th
5:30-7:30pm
Speaker presentation, follow up conversation, and potluck dinner
Centro Hispano of Dane County
810 W. Badger Road

Speaker Omar Mejia will discuss DESGUA’s work to create economic development and alternatives to immigration for rural Guatemalan communities through fair trade. A conversation will follow to exchange information and ideas.

This event is part of a nation-wide speaking tour organized by DESGUA (Economic Development for a Sustainable Guatemala/ Desarrollo Económico por una Guatemala Sustentable) to strengthen a network of solidarity among Guatemalan migrant communities, community coops in Guatemala, and supporters in the United States.

DESGUA is working to cultivate a relationship between Guatemala’s producer community and U.S. markets to generate a sustainable and dignified way of life so that immigration in exchange for food is not the only option.

Event Speaker: DESGUA member Omar Mejia is an agronomist who has worked for more than 4 years providing technical support in various organic farming projects such as organic coffee and livestock. He has worked with Café Conciencia to market products with organic and Fair-trade principles within a network of fair-trade conferences and educational workshops.
DESGUA: is composed of Cafe Conciencia(Guate), Santa Anita La Union(Guate), Grupo Maya K’iche(U.S./Guate), Grupo Cajola(U.S), and the Canary Institute(U.S)

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World Harmony Run in Guatemala

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In a spectacular launch of the 2010 World Harmony Run, runners in Guatemala carried the World Harmony Torch to the Pacaya Volcano for the 2010 torch lighting ceremony. The torch was lit from the molten lava at the volcano. The run began at 3 pm from San Francisco de Sales, near Guatemala City.

During the global start for the 2010 World Harmony Run, Purnahuti Wagner of Guatemala lights the torch from a river of molten lava near the peak of the Pacaya Volcano in Guatemala, along with runners from 25 countries. Founded by world harmony leader Sri Chinmoy, the run will travel this year to 100 countries on six continents over 56,000 km.

0101_04The Runners celebrate the opening of the 2010 Run atop the Pacaya Volcano after Guatemalan runner Purnahuti Wagner lit the torch from the molten lava. Runners include representatives of Brazil, New Zealand, Australia, Mongolia, India, Russia and many other European nations.

Homagni Baptista, Australia, carries the World Harmony Run torch after it was lit at the Pacaya Volcano in Guatemala.

0101_05For more information on this click here

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Guatemala Malnutrtion Problem

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Guatemala Malnutrition Problem

 

It is hard to believe that here in the Americas that Malnutrition is a serious problem, but it is. When talking about starving children your first thought goes to Africa. But here in Guatemala the problem of malnutrition has become acute.

 Guatemala is hardly one of the poorest countries in the Americas but according to Unicef almost half of the children of this war torn country are chronically malnourished. In some areas of Guatemala where the population is mostly Mayan the child malnutrition is over 80%. The diet for these families is mostly corn tortillas.

 In my travels through the country side of Guatemala and working and sleeping in villages throughout the highlands I have witnessed hundreds of hungry children and adults. Tortillas are a regular source of food for these families. My wife being a nurse states that a regular diet of this food without a proper balance of fruit, vegetables, and protein will cause permanent damage to these children.

 One afternoon we did physicals to some 100 children in a small school in the highlands outside of Patzun. Every child was malnourished, had bad teeth problems, and dehydrated. Most of the children also were underdeveloped do to the fact of being malnourished.

 As stated in an article printed in the EconomistThat points to a failure of government in Guatemala. The Mayan population were the main victims of a long-running civil war between military dictatorships and left-wing guerrillas. Although democracy came, and eventually peace, social conditions have been slow to improve. Income inequality remains extreme, even by Latin American standards. Two-thirds of the rural population remains poor. Guatemala came second to bottom of a new index measuring inequality of opportunity in Latin America published by the World Bank last year. Whereas Guatemala City has shiny shopping malls, gated mansions and trendy restaurants, many indigenous Guatemalans scratch an inadequate living as sharecropping subsistence farmers. “These people were totally abandoned in the mountains with no infrastructure, no education, no health,” says Rafael Espada, the vice-president”.

 Guatemalan people are great people, the Mayan’s have some awesome culture and are loving gracious people.

 We are here to help these people and get the word out about what is happening in our neighboring country.

 Please consider partnering with us to help these children that are caught in between starvation and political power.

 

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Mayan Family Kitchen

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Author Tom Johnson 9-28-09
Mayan family kitchen

Mayan family kitchen

 

This is the family kitchen in a typical Mayan Indigious home in the highlands of Guatemala.

In the back of the kitchen the little room made of wood is the family bathroom.

This is a typical kitchen for the  Mayan family, several homes I visit are not even this nice or roomy.

In the picture is a pot of chicken soup cooking on the open wood fire in the middle of the room. We sat with the family and enjoyed dinner later that evening, and to report the soup was wonderful.

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Faces of Guatemala

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Guatemala_January_2008_064

This is a picture of my wife Toni and a Mayan mother showing off her needle work. She is working on a new Hupil like the one she is wearing. All the art work and needle work is done by hand. This picture was taken while we were working on Escuela Integrada school in Chuchuca Guatemala. This family lives across the dirt lane from the school. Her children attend Escuela Integrada. If it was not for this school more than likely her children would not get an education.

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I could not pass up taking this picture. We were in  a church in Chuchuca Guatemala, Chuchuca is in the mountain highlands outside of Patzun Guatemala. These lovely faces on these children are something you never forget after being their. Children like this one is what Andrew and Becky Loveall gave up what they had in the United States to start Escuela Integrada school and give these children a chance for a  education.

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The Chicken Bus, a true way of life in Guatemala

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Life in Guatemala is quite complex. It offers such beauty in so many different ways. One of the ways that Guatemalans show their beauty is through their colorful artwork on their chicken buses. Chicken buses are one of the most used modes of transportation in Guatemala. You may ask, how did they get their name chicken bus? Well the name Guatemala January 2008 261came from the fact that rural Guatemalans’ transport their chickens, other small farm animals and their vegetables to market by old American school busses that are redone and painted elaborate colors.

Travel by chicken bus is quite the adventure. They are not at all comfortable to ride on, the suspension is very stiff and usually no air conditioning. They travel very slow going uphill (which most of Guatemala is mountainous) and going downhill is very fast. Hopefully the bus you are riding on has good brakes. Most of the buses run at overfull capacity and usually one or two people hanging on the back of the bus for a free ride. No real laws in Guatemala for the chicken bus.

I would recommend not riding a chicken bus in or out of Guatemala City (The Capitol) and I do not recommend riding one around Guatemala City either. Chicken bus riding is not safe in Guatemala City or the surrounding communities. The safest place I would recommendGuatemala024 riding on a chicken bus is around Antigua. I have personally road on chicken buses around Antigua and the surrounding communities. I have never felt unsafe and the cost is extremely reasonable. From stop to stop it was around one to two quetzal. Don’t get hooked by the gringo tax, keep an eye on what everyone else is paying and do the same.

No trip to Guatemala is complete until you have walked in the shoes of a true Guatemalan and rode on a chicken bus.

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