Saturday, December 12, 2015

Hope for a Better Tomorrow


Hope of a Better Tomorrow

 
In the days leading up to All Saints Day (Nov 1) in Cotzal, I was watching some girls fly their kites from the roof of their adobe home. Flying kites is a tradition during this season, and the children of the village get very creative in their designs and technique. I studied as these two young girls worked together to launch their kite into the haze of the day. Other children fashioned kites out of small plastic garbage bags, not deterred from participating in the tradition.

Some children stood and admired the success of others, giving hope that their creation could also reach up to the puffy clouds above town.  I wish I could have effectively captured that reflection of hope. “It is possible, I can do it to.” Puedo Hacerlo!

Later that week, I glanced out the small window of the poorly lit, cramped room I was using for the purpose of having conversations with students and parents about the possibilities of scholarships. The benches outside were lined with hopeful children and parents, stretching the length of the building and around the corner out of sight - willing to wait for hours to have a conversation concerning their educational future. They had seen others attending school, and suddenly they knew “It was possible” for their kids as well.


Elsa's little sister trails behind and looks up at her big sister and knows she too can find success. Hope is born. 
They say that success breeds success. WIND’s work with Colegio Horeb has been very successful. This past year the school swelled to 150 students! As the crowds gathered to watch the sixth graders receive their diplomas, you could feel the pride and encouragement surge though those in attendance present like a current of electricity. Maybe that is what HOPE feels like? I am not sure, but you could feel the goosebumps rise on the back of your neck. That kind of hope is contagious, and you want to immerse yourself in it.


WIND desires to build upon the momentum in Cotzal and at Colegio Horeb in 2016. I watch and see possibilities give rise to hope – a hope that will change the future. The sky is the limit and success is within reach. Together we can turn possibilities into realities.

 

 

Monday, November 30, 2015

Big Dreams


Big Dreams

A story of hope in the Highlands

 

The sun is just cresting over the Cuchumatanes Mountains as we climb up the steep serpentine road leading out of Nebaj. I am riding in the comfort of a private micro bus. Joining me this morning is Pastor Baltazar Toma Lopez and his daughter Luisa. The journey that brought me here is one of faith and an attempt at living life as an answer to prayer. This morning I feel exhausted, but satisfied. Ill-equipped, but trusting. And incredibly blessed.

Pastor Baltazar has become a friend. He is 36 years old, just a couple of years older than my daughter Amanda. When Baltazar was four years old, his father disappeared during the violent conflict which ravaged the Ixil region. During the war, community leaders were gathered up, often tortured, and eventually executed. Their bodies were disposed of in mass unknown gravesites. Baltazar told me this week that his father’s remains had been found just five months ago, and his family was finally able to have a degree of closure.

Baltazar is now a prominent leader in the community and is the director of the Bible Institute, Jorai which WIND has supported since our founding. He also pastors a growing church in Cotzal. Luisa is his oldest child, and she turned fourteen in August. My earliest memory of Luisa was having the honor of pinning an honors sash on her graduation gown in 2012. She graduated from Colegio Horeb, the brightest of her class, and she won regional academic awards for her grades. For the past three years she has continued to excel in her education while attending the national basico school (middle school) in Cotzal.

Luisa dreams of becoming a doctor. She dreams of one day helping those in her community, caring for the suffering. She dreams of making her community a better place to live. However, her dreams were to be placed on hold, most likely to eventually dissipate like the fog in the mountains this morning. That is the norm for young girls growing up in Cotzal.

Luisa was serving soup during a luncheon for visiting pastors last week when I saw her again. I had not seen her since that graduation ceremony three years ago. We had a chance to chat during lunch. She told me of her dreams, of her continued academic success in basico and about her dreams being placed on hold. She would continue on to bachillarato (high school) in Cotzal, but that would place her on a track to become a teacher. The community is abundant with teachers – most of which are not working. For her to realize her dreams, she would need to leave Cotzal and study at a private school. And that, sadly, was beyond her reach. Schooling cost for the type of high school she wants to attend is Q250 per month, or $33, with school materials, computer and uniform in addition to that. “Someday,” she said distantly.

So here we sit, as unlikely as it seems, headed for Guatemala City. Baltazar and Luisa will tour a high school in the capital and visit with a brother of Baltazar’s who has offered Luisa a place to live and a seat at his table. I am committed to help her with her schooling if they decide this is the right next step toward fulfilling her dream. Paul Townsend, a longtime missionary who has served as a mentor, once told me that there are some which the Lord will encourage us to take the next step with; to place a bet on for the good of the community and His kingdom. Luisa would have been on his list, and now she is on mine.

The day has warmed. Both Baltazar and Luisa are asleep on the bench seat in front of me with heads bobbing as we navigate speed bumps and pot holes near Sacapulas. This journey I am on has already had many twists and turns. I am curious what we might discover about others, about ourselves as we look beyond the next curve. But for now, I am content to find joy in pursuit of our dreams.