Friday, January 1, 2010

People, people, people








People are people anywhere. Guatemalans, Americans, Chinese, we are all living life, desiring to find fulfillment and purpose as we journey through. I have been reminded of this over and over as we have gone out to see different families or seen them through the clinics. A father in any culture seeks to be able to provide for his family, a mother in any culture works to put a smile on the face of her children, a child in any culture desires to have a full belly and the freedom to play and laugh worry free. Of course there are always exceptions and differences in every culture as well, but the basic needs that we all have as humans remain the same: spiritual, physical, and emotional.

As we work to keep this corn project going and serving the needs of the people, it seems paramount in everyone's mind that we do not forget the reason for all of this: the people themselves. Above are some pictures (yes, sorry, they are the same pictures on our Adonai Ministry blog if you read that) of some of the families that Juanito has seen as he has made visits to identify families in need, and here are their stories.

At the very top, you can see a picture of an older lady and her grandchild standing in her kitchen. As her fire that she will use to cook food and water burns behind her, she shield her eyes from the smoke and the sun that is sure to come through the cracks in her house made of small sticks put together to create walls. Most have at least an adobe house, although I have been surprised at the number that live in houses truly made of just sticks held together by some rope or wire. You may also notice her dress, called traje, the typical Mayan dress. The top is called a huipil and the skirt is called a corte. All hand made, the shirt will range from basic thread to a more fancy and even lacy design, and the skirts consist of 6 yards of material doubled over and then folded around them to keep warm and "grow" along with them as pregnancy, age, and food availability cause changes in shape, while allowing for the same skirt to be used.

Below this lady is a family from a nearby village called Tucunil. The mother recently died, leaving behind 5 children ranging in age from 12 years old to a little over a year, and husband with a drinking problem and signs of cirrhosis already. Most of the care of the family has fallen to the 12 year old daughter, as she has had to learn to cook, feed, and care for her younger siblings.
The third picture is of a lady who has been a wheelchair for years. As you can see, though, she does not let that stop her as she works on the board on her lap to get her tortillas and food ready to be coooked on the woodburning "stove" that she has created from some blocks and then a pan laid over an open flame. Most have at least what is called a comal, which pretty much is the same basic set up, made of blocks with a large metal sheet over top of an open area in which the fire burns. On this large metal sheet, they are able to cook their tortillas, food, or water.

The last picture shows a lady and her four children outside of their house. Here you can see the typical adobe house and how it is built in look and design. They are leaning on one of the wooden frames that holds up the porch roof, often made of tin. Behind them is a wooden door leading to one of the rooms; if this picture was panned out, you would most likely see another door on the other side of the porch, as they will line up their rooms in a row, all with doors leading to the outside, but with no connections between them from the inside. Dependent on your financial situation, the design will often stay the same, with more rooms added either to the sides or above, and then materials ranging from sticks to block for walls, dirt to tile for floors, tin to clay tile for roofs, and wooden to metal doors for each room. Again, if you have enough money, you may have a little room off to the side of the house which holds all the things necessary for a kitchen set up - starting with the most basic necessity of a fire. If you don't have the funds for a separate room, then the fire will just go in whatever inside space is available.

And of course, as every person finds frustrating when trying to tell stories from another culture, even with the aid of pictures, these pictures do not do justice to the stories behind what meets the eye: the strength to keep going when all around you looks hopeless; the perseverance to continue to provide for your family, even from a wheelchair; the fight to learn to care for a family at the young age of 12; the desperation that will cause you to turn to an alcoholic escape from life after the loss of your wife; the wisdom and stories that are told in the eyes of the elderly here as they have lived a life few of us Americans can even imagine, birthing and losing children, working with their hands to cook and clean, plant and grow, build and rebuild.... all of us people, all of us with a story to tell, all of us with an opportunity to glorify our Father.

And I am reminded of a Psalm I read last night...

"The earth is the Lord's and everything in it, the world and all who live in it; for he founded it upon the seas and established it upon the waters... Lift up your heads, O you gates; be lifted up, you ancient doors, that the King of glory may come in... the Lord strong and mighty, the Lord mighty in battle.... the Lord Almighty, the King of Glory." Psalm 24

There is a hope for all people, even when times look desperate and hope seems lost.... May the glory of the Lord shine through in all of His creation.

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