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When the Mountains Tremble (clip)

War on Democracy - Guate cut

Bilingual education in Guatemala

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View Article  Supporting Access To Education In San Andrés Itzapa

 Flying a kite in San Andres Itzapa  Photo: Nathan Golon

I came across a really impressive set of photos on life in San Andrés Itzapa, Chimaltenango, by Nathan Golon. There's a photo of Oscar Berger speaking on a visit to San Andrés Itzapa. Nathan explained:

"He spoke in the middle of a field connected to Itzapa by a rutted dirt road. Not
exactly the likeliest location for a presidential address. It made for an interesting scene. As for his speech, he mostly made loud and dramatic promises to deliver aid to the people affected by Stan--promises they have heard before. Of course, for the most part, the people who lost their homes have since rebuilt on their own with the help of family, neighbors, and non-profits."

Nathan has a website showcasing his photos and explains the scholarship project to help local children access education. This from the website:

"In Guatemala, approximately one-third of all adults are unable to read or write [UNICEF Statistics]. School is not free, and many families are unable to afford the cost of enrollment fees, uniforms, books, and supplies. For many children, this means the cycle of poverty will continue.

As a voluntary component of this project, students at Westbrook High will be working to raise scholarship funds for children in the town of San Andrés Itzapa, Guatemala. Global Vision International, a non-profit volunteer service organization working with indigenous communities in Guatemala, will distribute all scholarship funds to families who would otherwise be unable to send their children to school."

You can support the project by volunteering or by making making a donation.
View Article  New Book: "Guatemala. El Silencio del Gallo" - by Carlos Santos
Spanish journalist Carlos Santos, has just written a book, "Guatemala. El Silencio del Gallo" which looks at the internal armed conflict in Guatemala through the experiences of Spanish priest Father Luis Gurriarán.

In 1982, Father Luis went with Rigoberta Menchu to the United Nations to denounce the government of Ríos Montt. He was also one of the founders with 100 mayan families of village Santa María Tzejá in El Quiché at the beginning of the 1970s. Father Luis has arrived in Central America ten years before as a young missionary fresh out of the seminary. Beatriz Manz also told the story of Santa María Tzejá in her book Paradise in Ashes (2004) and talks at length of the role played by Father Luis (photo below: CLAS) in the village community. In Paradise in Ashes he tells Beatriz:

"I did know that the people were poor. What I didn't know were the causes of poverty and exploitation, or that the poverty was in great part due to the years of colonialism," he recalled. "From the vantage point of today, I can see that there was a certain culpability, not only from the Spanish kingdom, but a certain moral responsibility on the part of the church." Instead of meeting that responsibility, "the church allied itself with those in power who subjugated or enslaved the peoples of the Americas. That realization was a surprise or an awakening to me."

"The awakening inspired change. "I had no other alternative than to figure out how I was going to rearrange my ideas," he observed. "That meant to bring about a radical change in my mind-set and therefore find the way to aid people in changing their conditions." Within the diocese of El Quiche, others had already arrived at similar conclusions by the late 1960s. Luis found a strong movement in which the missionaries felt that preaching the gospel to a "poor, exploited, oppressed, ignorant population" was not enough.

The movement was, in effect, telling people to "wait for the kingdom of heaven and to continue being subjected to the current situation." Instead, these priests increasingly viewed the gospel as the path for people to guide themselves to liberation. Concientizar- to elevate their consciousness- meant to aid people in organising themselves. As Luis remembered his own transformation, "I came to evangelize the Maya of Guatemala, but in the process of getting to know them they evangelized me." [p.52]

Carlos Santos took part in a web chat on Spanish news site Diariocrítico.com (18-01-2007). All proceeds from sales of this book "Guatemala. El Silencio del Gallo" go to support scholarships in Santa María Tzejá.

See also this interview with Carlos Santos - "El periodista Carlos Santos narra a través de la vida de su tío en Guatemala uno de los mayores genocidios de todo el siglo XX" (found thanks to Porsilasmoscas).



Further reading:

Luis Gurriaran "The Role of the Catholic Church in the Cooperative Movement in Guatemala" - Centre for Latin American Studies - University of California, Berkeley

Guatemala: Toward Justice? In the spring of 2004, FRONTLINE/World Fellow Brent McDonald followed Berkeley anthropologist Beatriz Manz to Central America to uncover the history of a village that was caught in the crossfire of Guatemala's civil war.
 

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