Sunday, August 28, 2016

Pride and Tolerance

My despedida (farewell party) at Ema’s was beautiful.  As beautiful as the universal value this family has come to represent – not just to me, but to all of their visitors.

Ema presented me with a gift – a nagua, the traditional Ngäbe dress – made especially for me, custom fit and the colors of my favorite of Elsa’s naguas: yellow and red triangles on black.  Looks like fire in the night.  You decide the symbolism.  (Photo below.)

The gift was perfectly fitting, coming from them.  Ema’s family takes pride in their culture and its traditions, and they wanted to share it with me.  And they wanted me to feel included, part of their family, this symbolic act representing how they have treated me all along.

During the despedida, I finally had the opportunity to thank the whole family, all at once, for how special they are, not just in my eyes, but as other Volunteers have observed to me as well.  This is a family that is proud of their culture as Ngäbes.  They belong to the Mama Tada church (in fact, Ema’s husband José travels to other communities as a preacher of the church), which is a Ngäbe Christian-type church that believes that Jesus spoke directly to the Ngäbe people, that conducts all of its services in Ngäbere, that in other places is seen as isolationist and jingoistic and xenophobic.  Not here.  Not Ema’s family.

Ema’s family is proud of their Ngäbe culture, as Ngäbere-speaking, nagua-wearing, mochila-making Mama Tada adherents.  But they are also more than that.  Because they are also accepting of other cultures, too.  They want to share their culture with others and are open to learning from others about cultures different than theirs.  How else could we have had a Passover Seder in their house, in which both Hebrew and Ngäbere were spoken?  Rather than judge others for their differences, they are curious and ask questions.  Their openness is not about how much exposure they’ve had to other cultures, it’s about their attitude and their approach to people who are different.

When my parents arrived at Ema’s house, tired from the hike and anxious not to offend anyone, Ema immediately made them feel at home, made them feel comfortable, accepted them instantly as fellow human beings in need of nourishment after a tough climb, no questions asked, made them banana soup and eagerly taught them her mochila-making trade, as she had for me.

This, I believe, is the true definition of celebrating diversity: to take pride in where you come from, the parts of your culture that you wish to celebrate, while accepting that there are people of different cultures who wish to celebrate theirs, too – and being open to sharing with and learning from them.  A beautiful balance of pride and tolerance that I witness Ema’s family living all the time.  We can use a lot more of that in our world.

As I consider my upcoming return to America, I think about how much so many Americans need to hear that message and learn from Ema’s example.  It is good and right to be proud of being American, and all the other cultures within that.  But only if we balance that pride with tolerance for other cultures, respecting that other people are different, and being curious about their differences, seeking to understand instead of fear.  It’s about our attitude with which we approach other people.

Thank you, Ema, for sharing that with me, along with everything else.  You have been my abuelita and my maestra for two years – and you and your family are very special teachers, indeed.

Pictures:

Ema gives me the new nagua…







Then it’s time for a photo shoot!



And giving Ema a few small gifts, too.



A few other things going on in Quebrada Pastor:


Latin American democracy in action!  A roadblock to try to get electricity for the school.  These roadblock things have worked in the past.  For the record, I was OBSERVING, not participating – Peace Corps does not permit Volunteers to participate in political action.  So taking pictures, handing out water to people, hanging out in the road to chat with the other people who also happen to be in the road is observing, NOT participating, got it?



Another opportunity to explore Quebrada Pastor’s little slice of the sea.  José and his daughter took me through the mangroves and out to sea in their little dugout canoe on a perfect calm and sunny morning.  Got a great look at Quebrada Pastor’s coral reef, complete with dozens of starfish, sea urchins, anemones, a couple manta rays, thousands of jellyfish, and a the end, a little family of dolphins!  A few came within a 100 yards or so and flipped their tails at us in greeting.  Or perhaps a salute in parting.







The Beker despedida – presented with the Leaf Plate of Honor, signed by the whole family



The Lopez despedida


The Santos despedida


A year later, and Ema’s family has ALMOST finished her latrine – just missing the structure around it for privacy (time scales work differently here).  They promise to send me a picture at its “inauguration.”


Ema walked all the way down the hill in the rain to attend my “big” community-wide despedida!  She escorted me to the event– wearing my princess dress that Willy’s family had given me for my birthday – then spent the night at my house.  Pretty big honor for me, that she would make that effort.


Sigh, I’m really gonna miss this kiddo.  But Chelsea’s going to take great care of her.




Wednesday, August 10, 2016

Wrapping Up

It’s time to say goodbye.

Well, it’s been time for a while, saying goodbye little by little, slowly extricating myself from the community in all the ways that I’ve become entangled here.  Reflecting on my time here, what we’ve done, looking toward what I’ll do next.  Having last conversations with people – some whom I’ll miss, other whom I won’t – and relinquishing every last shred of responsibility for all the projects to their owners.

The construction of the aqueducts was entirely completed at the beginning of July.  Finally.  There was no pomp and circumstance in their completion, just relief for me and water for their users.  We had our final meetings – tying up loose ends, collecting information for the final grant closeout report, and mostly reassuring me that they were ready to handle the operation and management of the aqueducts.  The As-Built Report was submitted and a copy printed for each Water Committee.

When I gave Angel his copy, he told me that this document – nicely bound and filled with all the details about the work we achieved – was the best of all the gifts I had given him.  With this report, he said, he could now be the next Peace Corps Volunteer of Quebrada Pastor.  It was incredibly satisfying to hear.  In giving him all the information that went into the project – the data, calculations, designs, maps, resulting structures, agreements, construction schedule, final budget – information I had been using and controlling throughout the process, I had finally turned over the last part of the project over which I had any influence, my last contribution.  With that, he and his water committee became total owners of their aqueduct.  I like that Angel thinks of himself as the next Peace Corps Volunteer.  That was the idea, in the beginning.  He is already involved in helping the neighboring Volunteer with her Environmental Health work, inspiring the leaders of her community – so he is well on his way.

Also in July, I repeated the WASH (Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene) surveys that I had conducted during my first 3 months.  I went to every house in the community – all 116 – in 8 days, and did 84 surveys (it was exhausting).  But it was also very satisfying, a fitting symmetry to my service, a means of comparison to the community’s health upon my arrival, and a summary of how Environmental Health concerns turned out after Quebrada Pastor’s 7 years of Peace Corps Volunteers – which I hope Peace Corps can use going forward.  I got to see the results of the direct impacts I had, and even some improvement in places where I didn’t do any work.  Finally, people were building their own latrines without waiting for someone else to do it for them!

I’ve had to write my own Description of Serve, the official document signed by the Country Director that explains how I spent my time in Peace Corps, used primarily for job application but also stored in the Library of Congress (cool!).  This is the Summary of Accomplishments on mine:

1.       Ms. Litofsky designed and implemented 2 new aqueducts to serve a total of 180 people and trained 2 new water committees and their users to build, maintain, and manage their new aqueducts.
2.       Ms. Litofsky hosted, organized, and facilitated the week of Field Technical Training for Trainees during Pre-Service Training, which included the construction of 5 pit latrines, benefitting 22 people and training 6 people, and 4 rainwater catchment tanks, benefitting 17 people and training 5 people, and experience for 11 community counterparts as trainers and facilitators.
3.       Ms. Litofsky supported the existing school aqueduct water committee in analyzing technical and management problems with the aqueduct, training water committee members, and making repairs to the aqueduct that serves 116 users plus the 300 students at the school.
4.       Ms. Litofsky facilitated community members’ organization of a Project Management and Leadership Conference In-Site to improve leadership skills of 16 leaders of 5 community organizations.
5.       Ms. Litofsky developed youth leadership by bringing 5 attendees and 1 co-facilitator from Quebrada Pastor to the Acting Out Awareness Theater Camp and 1 attendee and 1 co-facilitator to the Sport and Development Girls Soccer Camp.
6.       Ms. Litofsky assisted the efforts of the community-run cacao products business Heidy Organic Chocolates to increase sales, diversify products, and expand the current and potential client base through promotion, translation, communication with potential clients, and training events.

Of course, all of those things were only possible because of the leaders of Quebrada Pastor, and the relationships my previous Volunteers, Eric and Catherine, developed working here before me.  And now, as I tell every community member who asks why no follow-up Volunteer is coming here after me, Quebrada Pastor doesn’t need us anymore.  We’ve taught all we can teach about Environmental Health.  Everyone who has wanted to work with us could.  Plenty of people here can advance Environmental Health development without the help of Volunteers.  Time to move on to communities with greater needs.

All work complete, all that is left is to say goodbye.  I’ve been invited to several family goodbye parties, and a final community-wide farewell is scheduled for August 20.  Then (teary-eyed, I’m sure), pack up and leave August 22, to wrap things up in the office in Panama City before my flight back to Columbia, Missouri on September 2.  And start a new adventure!

Note:
If you have any suggestions about what that new adventure could be (preferably water resources engineering related), let me know!  I’m still looking.

Another note:
I’m going to have to say goodbye to Hobbes, too.  She’s been a faithful companion, but Panama is her home.  She’ll be adopted by Chelsea, my neighboring Volunteer, who will take amazing care of her.

A few pictures:

A mother sloth and her baby spotted (by a community member, I still never notice them without help) while doing WASH surveys.


Anaica’s birthday party!  Classic brownie cake and the gift – a couple puzzles – enjoyed by all



Volunteer visit – hosted a new Trainee for a week (like when I visited Michelle, two whole years ago) – spent a lot of time with Chelsea and her Trainee, doing all the fun things – like reading Goodnight Moon to Heidy, going on Willy’s ever-more-perfected cacao tour, etc.



Angel’s birthday!  More brownie cake!


Undu’s birthday!  Best gift of all: a trip outside the house around the center of town.  Not easy navigating that wheelchair on the rough terrain, but a super special experience.




Gonna miss that view.


Angel: the new Quebrada Pastor Peace Corps Volunteer – now all decked out in the appropriate uniform (just missing Chacos)!