Wednesday, March 30, 2011

If Mercy Me can do it, so can you(:

Here's a challenge for the DR team--how about giving Mercy Me a run for their money--
--do your own....La Bamba(:


La Bamba
(Ritchie Valens)


Para bailar la bamba
Para bailar la bamba
se necesita una poca de gracia
Una poca de gracia para mi­ para ti
ay arriba y arriba
Y arriba y arriba por ti sere, por ti sere, por ti­ sere

Yo no soy marinero
Yo no soy marinero
Soy capitan, soy capitan, soy capitan

Bam-ba bamba, bam-ba bamba
Bam-ba bamba, bam-ba bamba...


Para bailar la bamba
Para bailar la bamba
se necesita una poca de gracia
Una poca de gracia para mi­ para ti­
ay arriba y arriba

Para bailar la bamba
Para bailar la bamba
se necesita una poca de gracia
Una poca de gracia para mi­ para ti­
ay arriba y arriba
Y arriba y arriba por ti sere, por ti­ sere, por ti­ sere

Bam-ba bamba, bam-ba bamba
Bam-ba bamba, bam-ba bamba...

Sunday, March 27, 2011

#5 - The Learning Continues....

In this update (photos):
- Fight Night
- New Haitian school rotation
- Kina
- More teaching

- Class Trip

~~~~~
 
Here we are again. 
It is Tuesday morning. In a couple of days we will be at the half-way point, 
but it doesn’t really feel like we’ve done anything in the first half. 
I think this may be a survival technique on our part. 
If the first four weeks have gone fast, the trip is great. 
If they have been slow, then something isn’t quite right. 
They have flown. 
It feels like we haven’t done anything. The trip is good. 
I told the kids last week that I booked a hotel for our final two nights here. 
Few were excited and this intrigued me.
I don’t want to go to a hotel, 
...I can’t stay in a hotel after what we’ve experienced. It is elitist”. 
Or the other common thought process: “I don’t want to go to a hotel 
because it means that the trip is almost over”. 
I’ve already had some students tell their parents they’re working 
on figuring out how to miss the plane. 
That’s where we’re at.
 
Last week there was a group of five adults here from Michigan and they 
stayed for one night. At breakfast they were talking with Miraya and 
the Michiganers were commenting on the noise here - the roosters, dogs, 
gun shots and other noises representing life in a village (I feel like 
I must say this - there are no gunshots heard here). 
They were talking about how it was loud and hard to sleep, 
and they asked her, “do the roosters bother you?”
Miraya didn’t know how to respond for she was thinking to herself:  
"what roosters?" 
I remember our first couple of nights here, a mere three and a half weeks ago,
and the children noticed the same sounds and asked me the same questions. 
At that time my response was identical to Miraya’s
We no longer notice what has become routine. 
It is our new life. 
~~~~~ 
 
Fight Night 

Fight Night (DR 2011)

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
It seems like I have begun a pattern of beginning these novellas with 
stories of antics and tomfoolery. 
This abounds. 
I have debated for a week now whether or not I should tell this story. 
Most parents are now aware of it since most parents have recently 
communicated with their children. I feel if parents know, 
we can share it with the world. 
A week ago I was chatting with Kina (Max, our host’s, wife - she arrived 
on Monday night) when some of our boys came to me asking if they could 
have “Fight Night”. They wanted to have a scheduled, organized night of 
wrestling matches. 
Boys will be boys. 
I remember the brawls our family had growing up and we are all still here.
We cracked a couple of doors and put some holes through walls,
got bloody noses and got yelled at, but my family made it. 
I figure if Jake can enter a family of four new brothers and 
make it through the first two years relatively injury-free; 
I figure if my immediate family with my nine brothers (the same amount as 
the male students in this class) can make it, then we can be a real family 
and fight it out here. 
Kina and I gave them our blessing.
 
After I finished chatting with Kina, I headed to the dorm for Circle 
Time. There are at least 6 of the children decked out with signs and 
other garb to help promote and get their peers excited for the night’s 
events.  
Miraya’s sign, which now hangs above her bed, was classic:  
“I want to fight too”
DJ had the complete schedule on his back:
 Rachel vs Mitch
Olivia vs Juliet
Kate vs Karina
Megan vs Miraya
David vs Peter
Nathan vs Mitch
John-Mark vs Jeremy
DJ vs Evan
Grand Finale: Jeremy vs Peter
 
These wrestling matches were well-run. Since Jake’s back is not up to 
par and Josh’s tooth is a little sketch, these two were the refs and 
boy did they do a great job! Anytime any of the fighters got even 
remotely close to something that may harm them, Jake and Josh stopped 
the fight. When fights got a little heated, they stepped in and took 
ownership of their task. They went over all of the rules and they 
enforced them. 
They were superb. 
It may be hard to believe, especially if you have not been around boys
who wrestle for fun, but this was just plain fun. 
The whole group was out there cheering each other on. 
Kina was beside me and together we cheered and laughed our fool head’s off! 
 
The overall Champion of Fight Night 2011: Peter - but what a fight! 

(sidebar: Jillayna was supposed to wrestle Olivia but she was afraid 
she’d maul Olivia. We decided to put safety first and so we changed the 
plans a bit. Olivia fought Juliet. It was also decided that on the 
night before we board the plane, there will be a match between Jillayna 
and Rachael. We’re both in full out training mode.  
Bring it on!) 
~~~~~ 
 New Haitian School Rotation 

Pato, pato. ganso in Haina
 On Wednesday we added a new rotation to the mix. There is a lady who
cooks for us at the base: Maria (she is one of two ladies who cooks,
actually). She lives outside of Santo Domingo, in Haina, and has
connections to a ministry there and connected us with Tessial. He is a
wonderful man, who speaks English well, and who has a heart for the
Haitian poor among him. 

 
Background: Haitians living in the Dominican are, generally, 
second-class citizens. Even if a Haitian child’s great-grandfather 
was the one who immigrated into the Dominican, unless he was sponsored
by a Dominican, unless he did everything ‘right’, all of his descendants 
will be aliens in this country. This is why Ina was drawn to Cercadillo
it is a village of Haitian descendants. Although most people currently living
in this village were born in the Dominican, they do not have papers 
and their parents do not have papers so (without Ina’s help) 
they do not have access to schools and other government run services.
 
The situation is the same in Haina. Our friend, Tessial, has started 
his own school for local Haitian children who do not have access to 
public schools. He runs it in a house-type building that he rents. 
It is small. There is one main room. One chalkboard. 
30 or so kids each morning and afternoon. 
Benches on each side of the room serve as desks. 
It is so simple. Primitive. Moving. 
This has been our new rotation. 
Every student has been at least once.  
Jeremy has owned this place as his own. 
He came home on Friday and said that he has two kids there. 
(their colour is slightly darker than Jeremy’s, but it don’t matter). 
When our children are there they teach, sing, play games 
etc...basically they love on these kids. 
And these kids love on the Canadians. 
 
Last week Karina, Juliet, Jake and David had the privilege 
of hearing the kids singing, “Here I am to Worship” in Creole (the 
Haitian native language) and naturally the Canadians returned the 
favour in English. Tessial was so thrilled! He wanted our kids to write 
down the words and teach it to him so he could, in turn, teach his 
church on Sunday. Tessial is thrilled with the performance of the 
Canadians and our children have appreciated the new environment. He is 
so thrilled with our children that he wants us to come to his church 
one Sunday and preach. 
The children are currently drafting their sermons to see who 
the lucky one will be - grade 10 Bible has served them well!
 
This school has students who speak mostly Creole. Generally, Spanish 
is their second language. English is their third. It has been quite the 
challenge and the relief for our children to teach here. 
They have been brought to the basics of language: 
they can not start by teaching English numbers and letters, 
they are teaching phonetics first. They are being required to dissect 
language to it’s smallest parts. After spending multiple days teaching 
just plain English, and struggling through making connections from 
English to Spanish, they have now all been stretched even further 
as they have often had to teach without the common ground of the 
Spanish language. 
Some students in particular have been stretched: 
Stacey, Juliet, and Megan
In the afternoons there is a sixteen year old girl, Elva, who comes to school 
but she is with kids who are all significantly younger than her.
As a result she has been getting some one-on-one help. 
The issue? She doesn’t speak any Spanish. 
So our kids have been tutoring her in English without any common 
ground. They have all LOVED the challenge! She is eager to learn, tries 
hard and they are able to learn a little bit of Creole in the process. 
Elva has blessed us. 
 ~~~~~
Kina 

As mentioned previously, Kina is here.  
Kina is Max’ wife. Max is our host.  
Max and Kina and four of their five children lived in the 
Dominican for fourteen years as their children were growing up. A 
couple of years ago they moved back to Stratford, Ontario.  
Max wasn’t content there. 
His heart was still calling him to missions. 
As a result, last year and this year he has spent January - the middle of 
April in the Dominican while Kina stays in Stratford. His original plan 
was to leave here at the end of March. Last year, and this year again, 
Max has extended his stay in order to help out our TDChristian 
students. 
You can well imagine that being away from one’s spouse for 
three months is hard enough. How much harder would it be to extend that 
stay by two and a half weeks in order to help out a group of Canadian 
teenagers?
Yeah. 
Before we left I met with last year’s DR crew who also 
worked with Max and Kina. Two days before I was going to leave with 
this year’s crew we were all sitting in a circle reminiscing. They 
remembered how much of a blessing Kina was to them and to their trip. 
I said not a word. I prompted them not.  
Ryan asked me how long Max and Kina would be apart. 
Three months, I said. Ryan looked up at the group with a solemn face 
and said, “Do you guys want to fund raise to get Kina to the DR again
Three months is way too long to be away from your spouse.
 
The group erupted. Smiles beamed. Excitement penetrated. 
The kids got together as much money as they could, from their own pockets. 
The did not fund raise. 
They gave of their wealth. 
A cheque was mailed to Kina’s house so she could buy a plane ticket 
to see Max. I told her a cheque was coming, but I didn’t know the amount,
and a ticket was booked. 
Cost? $525 or so. The cheque arrived shortly after. 
The amount? $515. 
God is good. 
Kina arrived last Monday evening. Max had to leave on Tuesday to pick 
up a work team and stay with them at the other base. Kina chose to stay 
with us. After two months of being apart, Kina chose to stay with us 
and support us. 
This is Christ’s love. 
She knew she had a role to play.
She wanted to love on my kids in the same way that they love on the 
Dominican and Haitian kids. She wanted to help organize details and she 
chose to support me. Well, on Tuesday and Wednesday we got details 
done. We visited the Haina school and organized for it to start the 
next day. We got our hotel for the end of our stay booked. We got other 
surprises booked. She took Ian and Karina to the clinic with me and we 
got them taken care of. She learned all of our kid’s names and got to 
know them. She enjoyed Fight Night 2011. And Kina and I got to spend 
some of the day together on Wednesday - which was much appreciated on 
my part. And two days later Max came to pick her up.  
Kina is a blessing. 
~~~~~ 
  More Teaching
  
Rachel and Ian and the Circle Game
 On Thursday I had the privilege of going to a school with Rachel, Ian,
John-Mark, Nicole and Evan.
If you could only see these kids own their
classrooms... Rachel and Ian taught together for the day, along with
Nicole in the morning. Despite what they may have felt inside, they
walked into each classroom with confidence - Ian even had his shoulders
straight up for a bit ;) What was especially neat to see was the change
between the morning and afternoon classes. 

 
(sidebar: in the DR you don’t work between 12 and 2. This is siesta.
You eat lunch and then you rest. Stores close for those two hours.
There are no classes. You chill.  Max sleeps. Often we tan. 
It is mandatory rest time. 
Even yesterday at the job site Josh asked if there was any work he could do 
during siesta. Peter and I told him emphatically to stop being North 
American, to be Dominican and chill! Enjoy the sights, sounds and 
people. There will be time for work later. 
We heart the DR. 
Schools have classes from 8-12 and then a whole new batch 
of ninos y ninas come for school from 2-6).
At lunch and siesta the six of us had a discussion about teaching. 
I gave them some tips: repetition is key, watch the people you’re teaching,
if you ask the class to repeat something but you only hear a couple of voices
 - do it again until you get everybody repeating, target people specifically
to answer questions for it makes everyone pay better attention. 
In the afternoon it was beautiful to see the improvement.
 
At one point Ian and Rachel asked the class to repeat something 
but only a handful of students responded. 
They said, “No, todo!” (No, all!) and there was a resounding response. 
They ended up having to teach a class for nearly two hours and they 
rocked it! They did, obviously, play the circle game. This game could 
go on forever - the kids still love it and still get ridiculously 
excited! 
 ~~~~~
 
Class Trip
  
Hanging out with kids on class trip
Friday was an interesting day. Jillayna, John-Mark, Ian, David, Olivia
and I went on a class trip. Wendy is a senior student at Renacer, one
of the schools we teach English at. Wendy has been a fantastic aide at
this school. She has been our facilitator every day that we’ve been
there which is extremely helpful given our chaperone’s lack of Spanish
abilities. She is a super star student who organized a clothing drive
at her school and a subsequent trip to a remote Haitian village. 

 
The purpose of this trip was to get her classmates aware of their fellow 
countrymen and to get them involved in activities with the kids there 
and hand out the clothes. 
Well, what an experience. 
The Principal, four teachers, about forty students and the six of us 
boarded an air-conditioned bus and headed out.  
Olivia and I were sitting in the middle of the bus and were asked 
to move to the front so all of the Dominicans could sit together. 
That was awkward. 
We drove for about an hour and a half to this village. 
When we got there, the Canadians were sent to a school to teach. 
(And the Dominican students, for the most part, hung out on the bus). 
This school was fascinating. It was one small building 
- maybe slightly bigger than a TDCH classroom. This building had 
makeshift dividers creating three classrooms. Every time someone spoke, 
each of the other two classes could hear. Our children worked alongside 
some Dominican senior students as they taught.
 
After teaching we were brought to the field to play baseball. The 
first game was just girls: us vs. the villagers. Jillayna has turned 
over a new leaf and now refers to herself as Sporty Spice so she was 
ready to go! Wendy was the go-to person for our team and often when 
there was more than one person on base - she told me to go up, 
regardless of the batting order. It was clear that Jillayna, Olivia and 
I have Holland Marsh baseball roots - we knew how to play. 
Our Dominican teammates?  
Not so much
Despite our efforts, The Imports lost 8-3 in a mere one and a half innings.
Oops.
 
In the afternoon we handed out clothes (again while most of the 
Dominican students hung out on the bus). 
This was a fascinating but frustrating experience. 
We were in the schoolhouse and had sorted all the clothes. 
The teachers of both the local school and Renacer helped 
with the handing out and sorting of clothes. They started by giving out 
a couple of outfits to each of the students at the school. Then they 
started handing them out at random through the two windows of the 
school. 
This was mayhem. 
There was fighting and grabbing. People hid clothes they received 
in order to receive more. The more aggressive, in-your-face people 
got more stuff than others.
Wow
It was uncomfortable for our group. 
We helped out a bit at first but then we just needed to step away.
It was difficult for our group because we saw things that didn’t make 
sense to us, but there was nothing we could do about it. 
We saw very little good in this process. 
The aggressive folks were rewarded. 
There was a quieter kid in the school that David and I were playing with.
He got one T-shirt. 
That’s it, but there were other kids who were walking away with arms 
full of items. It was really tough to see. 
It wasn’t help, it was handing out.  
 

David and friend who got 1 t-shirt
We talked about it afterwards and we struggled with what we saw. 
We decided that we were really able to appreciate how the donations we 
brought were handed out. 
The stuff we gave to Ina - she hands it out in her village, 
but they do not get anything for free. Her people pay a small price for 
everything for this creates ownership and develops responsibility. 
Last week she handed out the Crocs we gave her but she 
charged her people 50 pesos (about $1.30) for each pair. 
We also brought donations to the Ministry Centre where we’re staying.
We put our donations in a room behind a closed door and 
we haven’t seen them since. 
When a pastor knows of a need in his congregation he’ll come to 
that room and see if the need can be filled. 
As a result we cannot come home with pictures of cute local kids 
holding the stuff we brought. 
We cannot come home with stories of where the stuff went.
But we know the donations are going to people who need them. 
That is good enough for us. 
These two systems just seem to make more sense.
 
Regardless, it was incredibly interesting and eye-opening to experience 
this day. 
It was great to see Dominicans looking after Dominicans 
because so often I think we assume this doesn’t happen. 
It was neat to see a Senior student plan such a day. 
It was neat to go to yet another village in the Dominican 
that was made up of Haitian descendants. 
It was neat, but difficult, to see the same standard of poverty in this 
Haitian village. 
Despite the frustrations of the day it has been chalked up 
to yet another learning experience.
 
The learning continues...
 
~Rachael~

Thursday, March 17, 2011

#4 - Hairy Adventures

This past week has been quite exciting, as should be expected. 
I’ll start with our random adventures of the week. 
 
Hair seems to grow fast in the Dominican. Peter started the trend. 
He decided that his head was weighing too much 
and was much too hot so he needed a hair cut. 
Jillayna volunteered, but Jeremy quickly took over. Doesn’t look too 
shabby for a hack job :) The next day Josh wanted a haircut. A couple 
of days later Jillayna cut a good five or six inches off of my hair. 
Then Jillayna wanted to dye her hair so the leaders went out on an 
adventure. We found the perfect colour - we chose the colour because 
the girl on the box had the exact same nose as Jillayna.
Decision: done.
 
Megan and Olivia dyed her hair and it turned out quite red.  
Oops. 
So Megan and Olivia dyed it again a couple of days later...and it 
turned out a more browny-red. We now call her Anne and occasionally 
offer her Raspberry Cordial. There was extra dye so Jake dyed his 
mohawk and David got racing stripes down his head. 
 
But the kicker in  this hair saga is DJ and John-Mark
These two yahoos were chatting with Juliet, Olivia and Karina 
this past Monday night. 
The girls asked if they could shave the boys’ legs. 
Somehow, for some reason, these two hooligans agreed 
for the mere price of 1,000 pesos (roughly $28) each. 
For a good couple of hours these three ladies shaved both the legs of 
both of these boys. They finished with a complete moisturize of the 
newly shaven area. This craziness finished just before circle time so 
for the duration of our group meeting these boys ceaselessly caressed 
their womanly legs. DJ and Miraya (cousins) were sitting beside each 
other. Someone in the group made the astute observation that their legs 
were nearly identical. I guess hair can hide a lot.
 
Last week was spent in construction. We were never charged with 
completing a major group project, rather, we were given multiple 
smaller tasks to finish. Many kids were stretched in many different 
ways.
 
On the first day of construction Rachel, Megan, Olivia, Nicole, Ian 
and Mitch were sent to the school in San Mateo to do some cleanup. Max 
has been doing much construction at this site. He is building a 
vocational school on the same site as a current Christian elementary 
school. His dream for this vocational school is to have a place where 
skilled people are hired to teach various trades to folks in the 
community. 
 
This is the same site that last year’s crew worked at: we 
hauled multiple tonnes of coral rock fill and we hauled concrete up a 
self-created thirty foot ramp to pour the roof of the first floor. Now, 
a year later, this building has changed significantly. The second floor 
is nearly complete with block and stucco and should be painted this 
week. Anyhow, there has been much construction at this site and as a 
result, the sand and gravel that is used to mix the concrete had been 
spread out throughout the yard. It was the job of this crew to clean it 
up so instead of having these aggregates take up a wide area with a 
shallow depth; Max wanted it to be piled as compactly as possible. This 
may sound like an easy task but all six of these students will tell you 
that sights can be deceiving. 
 
They worked extremely hard. It was evident that some of this crew 
were not overly experienced using a shovel, but there was development 
and improvement in this skill as the day went on.
 
This was a day of growth for all six students. This was the day that 
Max, Jake and I left in the afternoon to go to the clinic (as written 
about in the last update). I was with this crew in the morning and then 
after the clinic, Jake and I joined them at about 4:30 in the 
afternoon. When Jake and I got there it seemed like this group was 
done. They weren’t done the work, they were done with each other and 
their task. It appeared as though they were frustrated with how long 
things were taking, with who was in the group and with who they didn’t 
have in their group.  
 
Jake and I came and helped out and, since there were limited shovels, 
that meant that some of the folks had to take mandatory breaks. 
These are good things because some people don’t have 
it in them to take a break. If gave everyone a much needed breather and 
a chance to get water. I could tell that the group was done so I sent 
Jillayna and Nicole to get some pop from a local colmado (corner 
store). This is a trick I learned from Max. For a mere 80 pesos (2 
dollars) you can lift spirits in incredible ways. We took a break, 
drank some pop, rested and rejuvenated. After this break the crew met 
their task with vigour and renewed determination.
 
That night at circle time I decided to use the events of the day as a 
teachable moment. I recounted the events. 
We talked about frustrations with a group. 
We also talked about how when we look at what we don’t have, 
when we’re fixated on who isn’t in our group, 
when we’re consumed with what our group members can’t do, 
and when we are visibly frustrated, we destroy group. 
We make a group uncomfortable. 
We make our group less productive. 
We make it difficult to accomplish our group goal. 
We are in the Dominican. 
It is not North America. 
Things don’t always work out here. 
If you have power for a couple of hours in a day 
to use power tools, that’s a bonus. When it’s gone, there is no point 
focusing on the fact that you don’t have power. 
This will not get you anywhere. 
 
When you want to weld but the generator that we rented conks 
out on us right after you have all the bars for a window cut and 
organized, there is not point focusing on how crappy this situation 
is. 
Pull up your socks and cut the bars for all of the other windows 
until there is a machine that works. 
When hauling gravel and sand and you feel like your group 
may be inadequate to finish the task, when you wish 
you had the tank John-Mark to come and save the day, this does not 
get you any closer to completing your goal.
 
In the DR, and in all of life really, but especially here, 
we need to focus on what we have and make it work. 
Our solutions need to be based on our resources, not on 
our hopes or wishes.
 
David and Josh were the foremen of the carpentry crew for the week. 
Grade ten shop has served them very well, and has now served Max and 
the DR very well. These boys owned this task - both in completing the 
work and in leading their peers. Peter was the overall maestro (the 
higher foreman) for the week. Peter did an incredible job of overseeing 
as opposed to doing. He is currently (when not volunteering as a 
chaperone in the DR) working as a carpentry apprentice so this is his 
forte and thus, a difficult thing to hold back on. But he did a 
wonderful job. He instructed David and Josh on what to do, gave them 
the tools and materials they needed and let them run free.  
 
David and Josh, in turn, also willingly shared their skills with others. They are 
fantastic teachers and their peers definitely appreciated their 
patience. Kate got to use a chop saw for the first time and when she 
found out what she’d be able to do, she had the biggest smile in all of 
human history. Rachel and Megan made a door handle, completely from 
scratch, for Max’ bathroom door. David, Josh nor Peter would give them 
any advice on what to use or how to make it, but the girls pulled 
through. When parts of this door needed to be attached, David made 
Rachel do it. She was afraid but David was super encouraging, told her 
she could do it, instructed her how to do it, and she completed the 
task!  
 
Nathan, Miraya, Juliet, Olivia, DJ and Nicole helped to construct 
various bunk beds. At the end of the week, as kind of a reward, Josh 
and David were asked to build Max a bookshelf. They had to design it, 
get their design approved by Max (not a hard task, if it had shelves on 
it - he was happy) and create it. It is quite a pretty piece of work. 
Many of our children were exposed to basic carpentry this week and they 
were all quite proud of of their new skills and various 
accomplishments!
 
There was much welding to be done as there were plenty of spaces 
around the base which needed security bars created. Jeremy did a swell 
job leading this crew. Similarly to Peter, Jeremy did a great job of 
encouraging the development of the children’s skills as opposed to 
completing all of the work by himself...although there is one minor 
difference: Jeremy had never welded before in his life. Somehow he 
claims that he taught Evan and DJ everything they know. Anyhow, Evan 
and DJ claimed to be experienced welders, and they definitely fulfilled 
this claim. Throughout the week they manned this task, while also 
finding ways to encourage people new to the trade. Nathan and Megan 
both owned the grinder and cut the bars with their welding masks, long 
sleeve shirts with the sparks a flyin’! Considering this was a brand 
new experience for both of them, they did very well...and they looked 
pretty cool too ;) 
 
Despite their successes throughout the week, the welding crew 
was not without their own frustrations. We rented a 
generator that was, pardon my french, crap. DJ, Evan and friends were 
itching to just motor through the work but they were regularly held 
back because of things outside of their control: faulty tools and power 
issues. There were quite a few moments of high anxiety, frustration and 
legit anger. The children were regularly encouraged to remember to 
readjust their focus. We are in the DR. This is life. Enjoy the times 
when the tools do work. But I think that we can all attest that this is 
easier said than done.
 
Another task of the welding crew was to measure out the necessary bars 
to fit into specific windows at a school, San Mateo, which is a fifteen 
minute walk away from the base. For some reason DJ and Jeremy were 
trusted with this task. They were dropped off by Max to measure the 
windows. They did so. They went to return to base by foot. They came 
back 45 minutes later because they were lost. I drew them a map. They 
left again. This time they were lost for a couple of hours, but 
eventually they found a guy on a motorcycle who apparently knew Max. 
The two of them hopped on the back of this dude’s bike and he took them 
to the base. We thought all was well. 
 
As they were working away they were looking at the measurements 
that they had recorded.
There was one width which just had “1/5”. Umm...yeah. That doesn’t work. 
Clearly someone erred. Away they went on foot again to find the other school. 
They got lost again on the way to the school, but the good thing is 
that they were able to find a landmark. When they were lost the first 
time Jeremy recalls seeing a building that he didn’t recognize which 
was his cue that they really were lost. When they were lost the third 
time they recognized the building that they earlier had not recognized 
so they knew they were lost in the same spot as this morning. Somehow 
this was reassuring. Eventually they made it to the school, corrected 
their measurement and, miraculously, made it back to the base. 
 
The most hilarious part? At the end of that same day Megan, Rachel and Jake ran 
to the school (sidebar: it is a 15-20 minute walk: they ran it in 4 
minutes, no jokes) to redo the measurements because many of them were 
off. What a day!
 
In addition to carpentry and welding there was also lots of concrete 
to be done. Jake, Miraya, Karina, Kate, Nicole, Nathan, DJ, Evan, 
Juliet, Stacey, Mitch, Olivia and many others got to be a part of this 
job. First the forms needed to be created and attached to the top of 
the existing wall that borders the base so we could lay concrete and 
level it out so we could put two new layers of block on top. Kate, DJ, 
Olivia and Miraya helped put up the forms, these four, Jake and others 
helped lay block, some mixed concrete by hand and many passed buckets 
of concrete to those who were forming. Concrete happened on at least 
three days so most children were involved in this at some point.
 
When the concrete was finished Max had the children move on to 
painting. Nicole, Kate, Stacey, Olivia and Mitch were integral in this 
job. Recently the walls had been stuccoed (a thin concrete coat was put 
overtop the block and concrete wall) and as such they had many rough 
patches. First these folks had to take stones and sand the entire 
surface: a much bigger job than one may imagine. They worked with 
diligence and consistency. Then they were able to paint. They saw many 
successes in this job but here are the three most exciting 
achievements: paint got on the walls, hardly any paint got on them and 
hardly any paint got on the floor. This is quite incredible considering 
many of the painters were first-timers.
 
One final task we had was at the San Mateo site (where the elementary 
and soon-to-be vocational school are). Jillayna and I oversaw this 
site. In addition to the moving of sand and gravel, one main task of 
the week was to knock holes into the relatively new concrete walls. 
Yep. We had hammers and chisels and we carved holes through block and 
cement. Why? Because we are involved in Dominican construction. Here 
they build the walls and plan out electrical outlets later. We had four 
rooms that each needed eight outlets. We needed to create holes for the 
electrical boxes and then create a path down from the box for the pipe 
which would be connected below the floor. John-Mark and Juliet took 
leadership in mapping where the outlets should be. They started by 
asking if I had a pen or a pencil. Within minutes they Dominicanized 
themselves and disregarded writing utensils and used hunks of concrete 
to mark the spots with Xs.
 
Many people experienced this work: Rachel, Miraya, Juliet, Karina, 
Kate, John-Mark, Stacey and Ian. It is tedious and time-consuming. It 
often seemed like we were living the definition of insanity: doing the 
same thing over and over again and expecting different results. We 
often cranked on the wall for a solid minute and didn’t see any change. 
We spent hours hammering at concrete walls. The number one benefit of 
this task (other than patience) was that it provided time to bond. 
Since we didn’t have to think much while completing this work we were 
able to play games and ask questions. Some of the questions we asked 
were: 
if you could pick any one to walk through that door right now, 
who would it be?  
What is your best family memory?  
Other than your parents, who has had the greatest influence on your life 
(if you lived your life over and this person was not involved in your life, 
you would be a very different person),  
who is your favourite parent (kidding),  
if you had to pick one sense to lose which would it be and why,  
if you could live one year of your life over again (but not change it at all) 
which year would it be and why? 
 It was always a fantastic time because each question required a descriptive answer 
which often led to story-telling and sharing of who we were. 
 
Not gonna lie, there were at least three occasions where a question 
quickly merged into talks that lasted more than an hour. 
That’s okay, we were being Dominican. In this culture most often people come first 
and tasks come second. This part of culture is not overly difficult to adapt to.
 
Ian was a tank this week. He was at this site every day and he kept 
chipping away at the walls with persistence. One day Max came with a 
sledge hammer (a welcome tool given the current supply of hand-held 
hammers), walked right over to Ian, said not a word, and handed it to 
him. Ian’s smile was almost as big as Kate’s when she got to use the 
chop saw. Ian also did a very good job of sharing his special tool with 
John-Mark. This tool taught John-Mark a lot about his own strength: he 
is literally a tank. He, more than once, went to hit the wall but went 
right through it to the other side. Yep, but he wasn’t the only one. 
Karina also does not know her own strength and did the same thing. The 
difference? John-Mark was smart enough to do it on a complete inside 
wall. Karina created a hole to the outside world.
 
On Saturday the leaders surprised the children with a trip to a local 
waterfall! Many of the children came to the Dominican with a goal of 
riding in the back of a pickup truck. Saturday was the day. Pierre, who 
lives at the base with his family, and Max drove us to the waterfall. 
Some of us took the back of the truck on the way there, others did so 
on the way back to the base. 
 
This waterfall was simply gorgeous - 
the fall fed into a beautiful blue/green pool of water. 
This pool trickled down into various streams and over a multitude of rocks 
and created new smaller falls. The water was cool but refreshing and invigorating.
It was a welcome, relaxing afternoon. 
 
Some girls (Kate, Karina, Nicole and Juliet) found some mud behind the falls 
and proceeded to give themselves a complete mud treatment: 
from every hair on their head to the bottoms of their feet. They were covered. 
There were a couple of folks close by who, after these girls were covered in mud, 
let them know that some of their friends recently went to the bathroom in the 
spot the ladies got the mud from. 
Lovely.
 
On Sunday afternoon the leaders took the children on an adventure. We 
went to a local sports park. All we took was cameras, water and a disc 
to play Ultimate frisbee. I think the children were somewhat skeptical 
of the plan. I told them to just start playing the game because then 
local people would come, and interaction and adventures would ensue. 
The afternoon started with an Ultimate game but ended with:
DJ entering a dance-off with some local boys
DJ and Evan play-fighting with some local boys
Jillayna, Olivia, Nicole and Stacey making friends with some little 
girls
Rachel, Peter, Miraya, Megan, Mitch, John-Mark, Evan and Josh throwing 
the disc around with some locals
Nathan and Karina having a race (and Nathan definitely won)
Juliet, David, Rachel and Jeremy doing a boot-camp workout with some 
local ripped army dudes
 
This week was great for group dynamics. 
 
Throughout the week there was incredible encouragement. 
Some has already been mentioned (specifically in the carpentry work) 
but it was heard and felt at nearly every job site. 
Many people’s roses for the day throughout the week was the 
encouragement that they felt from their peers. I can’t speak for all of 
the other job sites but I do know that Stacey was an incredible 
encouragement at the insanity station. She would periodically and 
intentionally turn around and specifically compliment each person in 
the room. 
 
This week was also great for group dynamics in other ways. In 
Santo Domingo both the boys and girls are split up into two separate 
rooms. In Sabana Grande the girls were in two different rooms but all 
nine boys had the privilege of sharing one room and one bathroom. 
Because power was intermittent it was not possible to have music 
playing constantly which, for many, was a welcome respite. As a result, 
games started to be played: Dutch Blitz, Uno, Euchre, Go Fish and 
multiple other card games. Juliet taught some of her peers a Ukrainian 
card game and they loved it! Risk was played twice but the first time 
our children made a grave mistake: they played with Max (for it is his 
game) and they eliminated him first. Clearly they do not understand the 
concept of keeping powerful people on your side. 
 
It was a beautiful and much needed week.
 
We left on Monday and have spent the past two days on rotation. 
 
All is well. 
 
~Update from Rachael~ 

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

#3 -We Have A Champion!

I need to start this update off on a high and low note. 
Here’s a story. 
 
Pretty much as soon as we got to the base DJ, David, Jake and 
Evan decided they were going to catch some geckoes. They caught three 
with relative ease and named them: Pablo, Jorge and Carlos. They loved 
these geckoes and treated them like children. They fed them and did 
their best to care for them. They spent much time developing proper 
harnesses and leashes for these geckoes so the boys could walk them 
with greater ease. 
It was a beautiful picture really. 
 
Now, Carlos had heart issues. He went into cardiac arrest twice 
but thankfully DJ knew some CPR techniques and pumped his heart back into action. 
After the second heart attack, the boys decided that the stress of captivity was 
too much for Carlos so they released him.
 
One day the boys decided that if they were a gecko, they would want to 
fly...so they created a parachute fit for a gecko. At first Pablo was 
going to be the guinea pig, but DJ would not let this happen since 
Pablo was close to DJ’s heart. It was decided that Jorge would be 
first. They duct taped him to the strings that were attached to the 
parachute and they released him off the roof. (Attention: the boys did 
multiple trial runs with various objects before attempting to use the 
parachute on legit geckos. No animals were harmed during the testing). 
Jorge made it down with ease and he enjoyed the ride: the boys were 
stoked! They wanted to share the fun with the other gecko so they went 
to detach Jorge from the parachute, but they ran into some issues. 
Let’s just say that duct tape is a high quality product; it really 
stuck to Jorge’s legs and it was not going to come off. Unfortunately 
DJ and a cinder block completed the euthanasia. Don’t worry, a proper 
funeral ensued.
 
But the saga doesn’t end here. One night DJ said good-night to Pablo, 
his favourite pet. DJ made sure Pablo had food and water and he ensured 
that Pablo’s leash was not too tight and he was tied to a tree so he 
couldn’t escape. Unfortunately this leash ended up doing more harm than 
good. We were heading to breakfast the next morning when Nicole 
directed my attention to Pablo. Luckily he still had his leash on, but 
unfortunately he did not have any eyes, skin or muscle to accompany the 
leash. All that was left of him was a beautifully cleaned skeleton; but 
attached to this meticulously cleaned skeleton was his leash, around 
his neck and still tied to a tree. 
Fire ants. Eaten alive. Couldn’t escape. 
Quite the story.
 
On Saturday the children’s eyes were really “opened”. 
This trip went to a whole new level as we entered Cercadillo (“Ina’s village”). 
The transportation to Ina’s village is quite the operation. 
First, we get two taxis to pick us up at the Ministry Centre (one of the drivers is 
Domingues - who was our main driver last year as well). We fit 6 people 
in one Toyota Corolla (as well as the driver - 7 total) and we put 5 in 
the other Toyota. These taxis drive for a good 20 minutes until we get 
to Villa Mella where they drop us off. 
 
This past Saturday I was in Domingues’ taxi and he asked me where we needed to go. 
I told him -Villa Mella, the same place as last year. He dropped us off at the 
exact same spot as last March and April - to the centimetre.  
Je suis impressed
From here some of us went with Ina in her vehicle for the next 15 minute drive. 
Ina actually took 10 Canadians in her new wheels - an SUV with only two benches...
yeah, we’re being Dominicanized quickly. Others went with the infamous David, 
the same car we used last year to get us to the village. 
Finally, after a good ninety minute process, 
the entire group made it up to Cercadillo...only to start leaving in an hour. 
Yeah DR.
 
Now you may be asking yourself, why doesn’t Domingues and the other 
taxi driver just drive all the way? Why the hassle of switching vehicles? 
Well, have I got a story for you.  
They won’t
They won’t travel up those roads to Cercadillo. These roads are steep and full of 
craters. They have holes and divots the size of Mars. It is always an adventure 
getting to Cercadillo. It really is, “the road less travelled”. 
That’s why. 
And that is why people in Villa Mella, a bustling town, 
have no idea that this village exists just outside of their borders. 
That is why the people of Cercadillo have so little. 
That is why they have very little access to the “outside” world. 
This is the road less travelled. Literally.
 
This is why we get picked up by David: a gentleman from Cercadillo who 
owns a taxi and who loves to help Ina out. Before we go any further the 
story must stop here. It is imperative that you know about David's 
taxi. I drove with David last year and so I warned the children about 
his car, but said that at some point we all had to go for a ride in it 
and chalk it up to, “a cultural experience”. Some of us walked from 
Ina’s house to meet David who is waiting at his car. 
 
Are you familiar with smash-up derbies by any chance? 
If so, think small-car derby. 
Picture a little Toyota that looks as though it has entered the local 
small-town fair's smash up derby for the last 17 years. There are few 
straight edges on the car because it is so dented. When the folks got 
in the back seat they realized they could see the earth through some 
holes in the floor (they're really small holes, I promise). The front 
passenger seat isn't attached securely to the floor so it resembles a 
rocking chair. There are few (if any???) door handles on the inside: 
built-in child locks, I guess. 
It is good times in David’s car.
 
The ride from Villa Mella to Cercadillo is like a time warp: you leave 
one world and 10 minutes later you're in a world that seems to be “20 
years behind” (although I use these words loosely). 
In David's taxi we climb the dirt road. He maneuvers over the craters 
to try to limit the damage to the underbelly of his car. 
We pass random piles of garbage, a makeshift baseball diamond, 
the river where the village used to have to get their water etc...
and then we get to a place that reminds me of the slum areas of Richmond, South Africa. 
 
It is hot, dry and dusty. The main purpose of the dirt roads is to transport people, 
not vehicles. There are few vehicles in this village. There are some 
Motorbikes/mopeds but the most common form of transportation is feet. 
This road exists solely for Cercadillo. Both ends of this road lead 
to/come from the main Villa Mella road. As one walks along the road 
the, untrained eye sees chaos and disorganization with respect to the 
yards of Cercadillo's patrons. There are some houses close to the road 
and these houses are surrounded by other houses behind and to all 
sides. Lots and boundary lines do not follow the typical North American 
clean-cut, square fashion. However, if one takes the time to follow the 
paths of stick and barbed wire fences it becomes obvious that 
boundaries between neighbours are completely clear. It's not our way of 
organizing a village, but it's a way. We are learning that other ways 
of doing things often make a lot of sense.
 
As mentioned previously there are two ways to enter this village. If 
you have the opportunity to enter the village with Ina, you are privy 
to something special. She drives to the village using a route that 
allows her to drive through the entire village. Whenever she enters the 
village in this manner she reenacts the Pied Piper, but in a vehicle as opposed 
to on foot. 
Children see her, yell her name in an adorable Spanish accent, and run after her car. 
They come to her window and she talks to each one. 
She greets everyone she sees. 
She intentionally invites children to the programs she organizes. 
As she drives she hollers out her announcements. 
She's a Dominican Mother Teresa, reaching out to a group of people 
who do not have access to a lot of the simple things that we take for granted. 
 
It sounds like such a common cliché statement and I struggle with this. 
At the same time, it's flippin' reality and although I've seen such world disparity 
in multiple different countries, in multiple different villages and affecting multiple 
different people, it still intrigues me. 
The imbalance of the world still intrigues me. 
This is yet another real-life example of what we study in classes.
 
Ina first came across this village while on a short-term mission trip. 
After a while she committed to spending an entire year here. She gave 
up a sweet position as a Reading/Literacy coordinator for a public 
school board in Massachusetts (I think). She loved the Dominican and 
never returned. She sold everything and moved here permanently. She's 
been here for 4ish years now. 
See what happens when you go on these kinds of trips?” she told my students last year, 
and I am sure she’ll tell this year’s students the same thing. 
Ina is convinced that some of our children are going to intern with her. 
Last year her dreams for me to move to the DR with her didn’t work out, 
but she has made it clear that she is still convinced that come this summer I will sell 
everything I own and move to the Dominican to work with her full-time. 
She says that I know more about community development than she does. 
It is difficult for her to keep up with everything, so she has been praying 
for full-time help and she is sure that I'm that answer to prayer, 
I just needed one more year of teaching to prepare. 
Hmm...why wait until July?
 
Ina's first project with this village was to help them with their 
water situation
Think of a typical World Vision episode. 
Women and children used to have to walk many kilometres to the closest water 
source: a river
To get to this river they had to walk down the crater-filled, hilly, road 
I wrote about earlier. The river is on the outskirts of the village 
so the trek could be a dangerous one as there are no houses/people around. 
When you get to the river you have to climb down an extremely steep bank 
to reach the water. Right now the river is extremely low, 
and that is without the village fully relying on it. 
The water is green. 
Picture living in this village. 
Think about what you need water for: Bathing. 
(but keep in mind you will NEVER have water fall on your head. 
You bath each part at a time. There is no hope of a shower-like experience 
and there are no tubs to actually sit/lay in). 
Cooking
Drinking
Watering the show garden behind your white picket fence. 
You are a mom trying to run a house. You've lived your whole life supporting 
your family off of the ground or from the resources of the village. 
You need a new water jug/container but you have never bought something 
that comes in a container. 
Where do you get the jug from? 
You need water to run the house. 
You send your 7 year old daughter kilometres down the road to a steep bank 
to a green, nearly dry river. She fills a jug or two and treks up the bank, 
balances one jug on her head, carries the other in her hand 
and begins the uphill walk back to the village. 
A family member bathes and a meal is cooked and the process must begin again. 
 
Thankfully this no longer represents life in this village. 
Ina arranged to get two wells dug so now they do not have to walk as far, 
their water is cleaner and all they need to do to get it is pump it by hand.
 
But what about those in villages elsewhere in the world?
 
On Saturday our job for the afternoon, because we were there for just 
about two hours, was to love on the kids. The sports crew was in 
charge. I got up there before Ina so we went walking through the 
village Pied Piper style. 
I saw a whole slew of kids from last year so I’d greet them by name:  
Jennimel, Johnson, Christopher, Eduarlin, Cha-Cha, Gloneli, Ninola
It was exciting. 
I’d say their name and they’d give me a funny look, 
because clearly they couldn’t recognize me or they didn’t remember me. 
With Jennimel specifically, I greeted her and kept walking. 
When I saw her again, I greeted her again. 
Then she grabbed my hand and walked with me for a while. 
Eventually, with her hand clenched tight, she looked up at me with her big eyes
and asked, en Espanol, “how do you know me?”
 
As we walked through the village Christopher came up and asked what we 
were doing. I told him we wanted more of the kids so we could play 
games with them. 
That was all we needed - to have one of the locals on our side. 
He ran up ahead and gathered the village kids. Soon we were 
turned around and walking back to our “base” with plenty of locals. 
Keeping in mind how  the transportation works, at this point we only 
have half of our crew. We didn’t want to get started on the larger 
organized games so I told the Canadian kids to have at ‘er - have fun. 
They started the infamous “Pato, Pato, Ganso” (Duck, Duck, Goose). We 
were all sitting in a circle together when Ina pulled up. As soon as 
the kids saw her vehicle they started clapping and chanting in the 
cutest Dominican accent, “Ina, Ina, Ina!” 
She is STILL a celebrity in this village!
 
The afternoon started with a game of soccer: boys against girls. 
The organization necessary for a typical soccer game did not last 
long...ten minutes max. Despite the planning of the sports crew: 
Rachel, Mitch, Ian, Jake, Josh, Stacey and Evan, the next two hours was 
pretty much mayhem. The Canadians pulled out any tricks they could to 
entertain the Dominicans. It was a lot of loving on and interacting and 
all using simple tools, if any at all. A soccer ball provided fun 
through a soccer baseball game since baseball equipment was hard to come by. 
That’s all; the rest was simple fun. 
The group was on a large open field so there was plenty of space 
and there was plenty of Dominican energy. 
Fortunately for the leaders these little Dominicans exhausted our children.
 
Every night here we have circle time where we go around the circle and 
each person in the group shares their roses and thorns of the day - 
their high and their low. 
At circle time that night the overwhelming theme of the thorns 
was that the kids were wild and misbehaved. 
In general, the Dominican children were described in a frustrated, 
negative light. This isn’t to say that they didn’t have fun: it was 
just that my group was shocked at the behaviour of the kids, especially 
in comparison to the students they had taught earlier in the week. 
I wanted to comment, but I held back. 
I am sure that as our time here continues and as we interact more with the village kids,
the students will be able to see a larger picture of the village kids: 
beyond this mere two hour window. 
I am sure that as our time here continues, our Canadian children will begin 
to understand some of the behaviours of these children who live at the end 
of the road less travelled.
 
Sunday was a regular day - except at church this week they had “the 
Canadians” stand up - but this was because there was also an American 
group (Joni and friends) there as well. They had each group stand up 
and then the pastor talked about how neat it was that there were at 
least three different countries represented. For the second week in a 
row we sang part of a song in English. 
We are happy here.
 
Monday brought a move to another base - in Sabana Grande de Boya, 
about an hour and a half away. Max dropped me and thirteen students off 
on the side of the road :) in Santo Domingo and got a bus to take us to 
the other base. He drove the rest of the children. On the bus we were 
quite the spectacle and were watched by the locals for almost the 
entire time - especially Rachel. She was so exhausted from taking in 
the gorgeous view that she fell asleep partly through the ride. She was 
sharing a seat with a local woman. As Rachel was sleeping she did the 
head nod-thing and hit her chin on the lady’s shoulder. The lady smiled. 
We heart Dominicans.
 
The first day of work at this new base, Tuesday, Jake was left at the 
base working on concrete under the supervision of Max. Jake got really 
itchy as the day progressed. He had a rash for a couple of days before 
this but it went in ebbs and flows so we weren’t overly concerned, but 
this day it got really frustrating for Jake. I was working at another 
site so I was unaware of the issues. At lunch when my group and I 
returned Max told me he was quite concerned with Jake. Max needed to 
get tools from Santo Domingo, the other base, and so we should kill two 
birds with one stone. We packed up the van, Max, Jake and I, and we set 
off for the more than an hour drive back. 
 
We took Jake to the clinic first. 
As Max was in the room with Jake and the nurse I had another 
nurse ask if Max was my dad. Last time this nurse asked if Max was Josh 
and Kate’s dad. I laughed and proceeded to explain to her, en espanol, 
who we were and why Max and I kept coming back with different kids ;) 
Max comes out of the room, puts out his hand for a high five and says,  
We have a winner!” 
To which I reply, “Jake is getting a needle in his behind? He is so lucky! 
The rest are going to be so jealous!” 
Max and I laugh hysterically, in the lobby, as the other nurses look at us with 
wonder and intrigue. They aren’t sure what to do with us. Jake comes 
out of the room with the biggest smile I’ve ever seen him with! 
I win! I got it!” he says. 
Max was such a proud father at that moment!
 
On the drive home we discussed the best way of telling the group about 
the win. The three of us decided it would be best to keep it completely 
hushed until circle time. 
Challenge accepted. 
We got back in Sabana at about 4:30 so there was quite a bit of time 
before we could share the good news of the day. 
But soon enough circle time came. Peter was in charge of who started 
and he mysteriously, because he had absolutely no idea, 
organized the circle to go in such a way that Jake was last. 
I was laughing inside. 
Finally it gets to Jake
He started with his thorns. 
He moved on to his roses and talked about different events of the day. 
Casually at the end of his speel he said, “and I went to the 
clinic and I got a needle in my behind. I win.” 
Super casual. 
Super effective. 
Super fun. 
The circle erupted in jealousy and excitement! 
Kate was especially jealous - she was so close to taking the trophy 
when she went to the clinic but she couldn’t pull through. 
Well done, Jake
You’re the champion. 
Not that we want more illnesses, but the challenge for the group 
now is to see who can join you on your team ;)
 
We spent the rest of this week doing construction at this new base - 
details of which will be shared in the next update. 
‘tis all for now.
~Update from Rachael~