![]() Mission to Casa Guatemala Back on July 21, I received a call from a friend, Laureen Dempsey of World Links in Pennsylvania, telling me of a serious problem in Guatemala. I know Laureen personally, as she is assisting my wife and I with our adoption of a little boy from the same country.Laureen told me that she was forwarding an email she received from the director of the Casa Guatemala orphanage, www.casa-guatemala.org a home she works with that’s located deep in the Guatemalan interior, caring for upwards of 250 children from 2 to 16 years of age. In the email and others that followed, the director related a dire situation, one where in the previous week, seventeen (17) of their children had been bitten by bats while they slept in their bunks; bats that were now invading the children’s houses after dark. The director, fearful of rabies and mindful of reports from elsewhere in the region, was having the children treated at a local clinic as a precaution. We received a large donation for building materials from a Tallahassee organization called "We the People Inc" that proved invaluable. The Good Shepard Catholic Church donated a huge amount of clothes for the children and we are working with another organization to get them all transported down to the orphanage.In the end we hauled 850 pounds of tools and donated supplies, but only put a small dent in the actual need. The project to build sub-roofs in the three children’s houses continues, both by local staff and another group from up north that will head down soon. As with most projects on the island, they’re totally dependant on donations to pay for the materials and teams of volunteers to help with construction. To say the trip was challenging would be an understatement. Little was as reported or imagined, language differences slowed construction, no existing sections of buildings were square, and most boards had to be cut with hand saws, as the blade in the 30 year old skill saw, the only power saw, was warped.The temperature inside the tin roof house we worked on each day went well over a hundred degrees and the combination of high heat and local microbes resulted in every member of the team becoming sick by weeks end. As we sat in the Guatemalan Airport waiting to fly home, we all agreed the mission had been well worth it, and discussions turned to the logistics of the next trip down. |
||
Home | Asset Exchange | Real Estate | Securities Exchange | Annuities | About Us | Donate | Get Involved | Contact Us | Advisor Login Copyright © 2012 We The People, Inc. of the United States. All Rights Reserved | Privacy Policy | Disclaimer |
||