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Pullman teens touch lives of
families on house-building trip to Mexico
For six of eight youth from
Sacred Heart Church in Pullman who participated in a two-week summer
mission trip to Agua Prieta, Mexico, it was their first experience in a
developing country.
Rachel Brown and Elizabeth Dutton had participated in the 2002 mission
trip. It was youth director June Brown’s fourth trip.
Elizabeth has learned that “no matter what people look like, no matter
where they are from, no matter where they live, no matter what language
they speak, they are all brothers and sisters.”
Having been there before,
she was less shocked by what she saw this time.
“No matter how many times you see poverty, however, you are changed,”
Elizabeth said. “I’ve been transformed on many different levels,
ranging from simple things such as taking shorter showers in an attempt
to conserve water to having my faith and love strengthened to having
even more compassion to get out there and help what little I can.
“Not only was I affected by the people of Mexico, but also I was
blessed to be part of the community of teenagers and adults in the
youth group. We formed a tight bond.”
Other youth going were Claire Dutton, Andy Hughes, Cecil Jones, Alex
Marcelo, Liz Paul and Kathleen Sutherland.
Mark Baetzhold, an
Eastern Washington master’s degree student who has been working with
The Fig Tree and who has seen poverty in work at House of Charity in
Spokane, accompanied a Pullman group on a summer mission trip. Marcia
Gonora and Tara Young-Brown were the two other chaperones.
Agua Prieta is a city of about 200,000
in the Sonoran Desert on the U.S.-Mexican border. On any day, a
“floating population” of 50,000 people waits for the opportunity to
cross.
Because that border between Agua Prieta and Douglas, Ariz., is a
popular port of entry for undocumented immigrants, the United States in
1998 built a five-mile metal fence with stadium-sized lights that shine
on it from the American side and give the border the appearance of a
military state, Mark said.
“We crossed the border into Agua Prieta at night, and the environment
changed dramatically and instantly,” Mark said. “We noted the
absence of adequate infrastructure. Children and dogs wandered on
unpaved streets. One-room cinderblock homes struck me
immediately.
“I have worked with the rural poor in Appalachia and the homeless in
Spokane, but the poverty in this community was like nothing I have
experienced. I had expected it would be a more developed,
wealthier region because of its proximity to the U.S. border.”
Tara, who is campus minister at Newman Center at Eastern Washington University in Cheney, said that
“the border towns have some of the worst poverty in Mexico.”
She explained that migrants from Mexico and other Latin American
countries travel to border towns seeking work in American- and
European-owned plants, or they try to cross the border, seeking greater
economic opportunity.
However, plants are closing down to relocate overseas, and crossing the
border is increasingly difficult with U.S. surveillance.
As a result, a significant percentage of the population is unemployed
and confined to makeshift informal housing in industrial neighborhoods
on the outer edges of the city, Tara said.
The group resided for eight days in Agua Prieta at the Divine Providence Ranch, a program
of the Rancho Feliz Charitable Foundation, established in 1987 by Troy
and Gil Gillenwater.
Gil, a real estate broker in Scottsdale, Ariz., felt compelled to
act on behalf of the most vulnerable after witnessing the extreme
poverty of Agua Prieta. Initially formed to assist abandoned
children in the border towns, Rancho Feliz strives to provide American
volunteer groups with the opportunity to grow through serving the less
fortunate.
“Service provides us unbounded possibility. Our lives start going
better, there’s somehow more quality, more meaning, more purpose and
more joy,” Gil said. “There is a greater sense of community, and
we realize that we live in a world of abundance and that there is
enough for all of us.”
In addition to accommodations for volunteers, the ranch hosts seniors
and orphans in separate facilities. The proximity to the
orphanage and nursing home allowed the volunteers to interact freely
with children and seniors.
The youth group from Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Pullman spent time
visiting, playing guitar and singing songs, dancing and serving meals
at the nursing home. At the orphanage they played with the
children, read stories and worked on crafts.
One afternoon, the group prepared hamburgers and salad for seniors,
children and some ranch staff, ending the evening with a piñata
ceremony.
The youth also engaged in
projects outside the ranch.
During the week, they awoke around 4:30 a.m. to be at work sites by 6
a.m. Because temperatures rose to 100 degrees or more, most
workdays ended by 1 p.m.
They spent two days scraping, washing and painting walls of an
elementary school.
For three days, they helped a family construct a one-story cement-brick
house. The first day, they mixed cement and laid the concrete
floor. The second day, they added several layers of bricks.The
third day, they put on a tin roof.
During breaks, the Pullman group also played tic-tac-toe and other games in the dirt with the family’s
four children and had a “water war” the last day.
Despite difficulties of communicating in different languages, the
volunteers and the family formed bonds of playfulness, respect and
friendship, Mark observed.
On the last day, the group toured a U.S.-owned factory that produces
microphone and communication parts. It was clean and well run,
like U.S. factory conditions, but the factory workers earn the
equivalent of $12 a day.
“We learned that the factory would close next year to relocate to
China, where the company will utilize cheaper labor and less-regulated
environmental standards,” Mark said.
Another educational experience
occurred when the group split into two “families” to shop for
dinner at a local grocery store. Each group was given 40 pesos
(about $4)—what a typical Mexican family might spend on dinner.
The groups could afford only basic foods such as beans, rice, eggs and
inexpensive fruits and vegetables. Back at the ranch, the youth
decided to combine what they had and share their meals.
“The experience deepened our awareness of the realities poor people
throughout the world experience daily,” Mark said.
The youth left Agua Prieta strengthened in their commitment to serve
people in need and with a new awareness of issues of social justice, he
said.
“In addition, we will remember the God-given bonds of friendship formed
with the people of Mexico and with one another,” Mark said.
For information, call 332-4402.
By Mark Baetzhold
- © October 2004
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