Friday, December 17, 2010

December in a Nutshell

December has been full of events in the barrio, from mingas to site visits to open houses to Christmas parties. Here’s the rundown:

Nuestra Minga
A minga is an event where a community comes together to complete a project, kindof like a service day or service event. The object is to better the community in some way, shape, or form. A couple weeks ago, we held a minga at the Casita de Chocolate to clean up and organize. Some of the teachers and high school kids from our Saturday refuerzo program helped out. We put the kids to work cleaning and moving furniture around (but afterwards they got to climb up on the roof and pick mangos, so they were pretty happy about it).



Site Visit
Peace Corps admins routinely visit volunteers at their sites to observe activities and meet with our counterparts. It’s a good time to check in on project development as well as get everyone on the same page as to how things are going along, how best to proceed with current/future projects, and what resources are available to us going forward. My site visit went well, and I am excited for some projects we’ve got in the works for the upcoming vacation season.

Open House
Earlier this week, my organization, INFA, hosted an open house. Representatives from 14 different parts of Guasmo Sur set up tents with activities, posters, and information on what INFA has to offer in their specific neighborhoods.

The event took place in La Playita, a small strip of beach along the River Guayas, which runs through the barrio. La Playita is a few blocks of beautifully developed riverfront, with food stands and outdoor seating, public restrooms, a sandy beach area, and a lookout tower that affords a view down the river and out across the shrimp farms. It is amazingly clean, these five blocks or so, especially when you consider you can walk one block over into the barrio and be back among the trash-strewn streets (which is the most common complaint among barrio residents – perhaps a future minga?).

Looking upriver from the vantage tower, you can see narrow boats that have been jerry-rigged into a type of motor-powered canoe. My friend Paquita tells me these are the fishermen who ply the contaminated riverwaters every day, going out and coming in according to the tides. Further down, the massive metal hulks of ships at dock in the port are visible. Downriver affords a view of La Playita, followed by a stretch of lush vegetation clinging to the riverbank, and finally a hodgepodge of stilt-legged houses jutting out over the water’s edge. These houses rise up crooked out of the haze and humidity and are held up, it seems, by hopes and dreams.

The open house event was a huge success, and I got to speak to dozens of parents and families about my work as a volunteer, getting valuable feedback from them as well. But I came away impressed with what a city of juxtapositions Guayaquil really is: a beautiful beach in the middle of the barrio, the slums in the south, and if you follow the river northward, millionaires in their mansions. It’s a thriving place, and I’m excited to be here.

Christmas Parties
Molly and I hosted a cookie decorating party on our terrace this past weekend. It started with a baking bonanza, in which we baked an estimated 12 dozen or so cookies (hard to gauge what with our eat-as-you-make-‘em technique).





Tomorrow will be a big day, as we are hosting a Christmas party for the kids in the barrio, after which I will be packing up and heading to the airport to go home to Atlanta for the holidays.

New Apartment
A new development in my apartment search: a place opened up in my host family’s building, which means I get to live here with a family and still have my own space – and PCV neighbor to boot. Score! Or, as the soccer commentators here say: Gooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooool!





So I will be coming back after Christmas to furnish and move into my own apartment. And I plan to have a futon, so Guests: Ye Be Welcome. Satisfy your South American wanderlust in Guayaquil.

Next post will be from north of the equator…abrazos a todos!

Saturday, November 27, 2010

El Día de Agradecimiento

I was thankful to celebrate Thanksgiving with friends American and Ecuadorian on Thursday. My friend Molly hosted a potluck dinner on the terrace outside her apartment, and a bunch of volunteers in and around Guayaquil came for the feast.

We had a turkey, and stuffing, and sweet potatoes, and mashed potatoes, and roasted veggies, and pumpkin pie, and apple pie – all the most important staples – so it was surprising that the general favorite Thanksgiving dish was the strawberry salad made by my friend Kelsea. Just goes to show how rare it is for fresh veg to find its way to your plate here. Kelsea had to soak all the spinach and lettuce and strawberries in a bacteria solution to kill any parasites, which we gringos must do any time we eat raw produce.



We had a good-sized gathering…





…and more than enough food to go around.

Oh yeah – the sweet potatoes here are purple.

Changing the subject, Ecuador has a national census every 10 years. From 7am to 5pm tomorrow (Sunday the 28th), everyone is under curfew and must stay in their homes while teachers and high school students go door to door conducting the census. The whole country has been under ley seca (“dry law” – no alcohol sales or consumption) since Friday night, just to make sure we’re all sober come Sunday. A little bit different from the way the census is done in the states!

On the agenda for tomorrow:
Watch the first four Harry Potter movies
Eat Oreos
Play with Anita la Gatita Bonita



Some of the kids found her abandoned on the playground a couple weeks ago and brought her to me. She is about four weeks old, I think, and has been living in a makeshift nest-thing in my room, toddling about and mewling and making messes everywhere.

But I’d like to know, How else can you respond when seven wide-eyed kids ask, “You’re going to take her home and take care of her, right?”

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Jungle-mench



This week, Menchie was privileged to be included on a trip to the Ecuadorian jungle along with the VAC team (below), who showed him a good time. Here they are pictured in Puyo, capital of the Pastaza province. VAC, the Volunteer Advisory Committee, meets periodically throughout the year. They act as volunteer representatives to the Peace Corps Ecuador administrative staff in Quito.

The picture of Menchie with the three little girls is in a village an hour outside of Puyo. The girls are sisters and a cousin, all members of an Oriente (jungle) Quechua (indigenous) community called Chaguamango.

Monday, November 8, 2010

Last night, I opened my door to go to the kitchen and found a chicken.



“Is this an Ecuadorian tradition I don’t know about?” I wondered. “Sneaking into someone’s house and leaving a chicken – what does it mean?” Unsuccessful at eliciting information from the chicken itself, I took the opportunity to snap some pictures.



When my host mother got home, I asked her, “How is there a chicken in the house?”

“Someone gave it to me,” she answered proudly. “And it’s fat, too!”

And that settled the matter.

Chicken has taken up residence in the kitchen, although I’m not sure how long she will last in those quarters - alive, anyway; rumor has it that Don Lucho (my host dad) is hankering after sopa de pollo. In the meantime, she provides a ready audience for Marcelo as he practices reciting his presentation for English class.

Friday, November 5, 2010

Menchie Comes to Ecuador!

For those of you who don’t already know, I left a blossoming career in frozen yogurt when I decided to join Peace Corps, and I rather miss it. The people, the energy, the endless toppings options… So I requested a companion from home to comfort me.

Say hello to my little friend.



This is Menchie soaking up some culture at the Modern Art Museum in the city of Cuenca, Ecuador. Cuenca is renowned for its Day of the Dead feriados and urban flair; with balconies, bridges, cathedrals, and cafes, it feels like a European city that’s been picked up and deposited this side of the Atlantic – and in the midst of the breathtaking Andes landscape, no less.

Menchie is excited to be in Ecuador and to be making new friends.



He will surely be popping up here and there as he takes the opportunity to travel around the country. In fact, he’s on his way to the jungle right now, so stay tuned.

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Día de los Abuelitos

Just before the Halloween weekend, we celebrated Día de los Abuelitos at a few of the refuerzo centers I work at. Below are pictures, but first let me outline the key ingredients to an Ecuadorian party so you can identify them appropriately when you see the photos:

1) Chairs lined up against every wall. Everyone sits on the chairs, and the open space in the middle is for things like…
2) Dancing. Everyone dances; even if you can’t walk yet, you dance.
3) Some kind of spoken performance – recitations, speeches, songs, you name it.
4) There is also food, in abundance.
5) Music, played at maximum volume.

Those are the basics. Sometimes there’s things like raffles and competitions, too. At a charity bingo event my family hosted a few weeks ago, there were clowns, a dance troupe, a raffle, singers, dancing competitions, catered food, and beer (the event took place on a Sunday, outside a church and next to a police station). It lasted for seven hours. People take their bingo here seriously. In retrospect, I think my friend Molly is right, bingo is the Ecuadorian equivalent of a block party, only with prizes at the end.

Anyway, below are some pics of our Día de los Abuelitos celebrations.



[Above: Maritza's house, where CAE1 is held. "CAE" = Centro de Apoyo Escolar, School/Studies Support Center]

[Below: Parents, grandparents, and kids came to celebrate]





[Above: Enriqueta can’t wait to eat empanadas, cake, and jello with flan]

[Below: Evelyn, our model, shows off some of the food]





[Above: Joshua: Do I really have to smile for this picture?
Pierina: Hey look, flan.
Mayerli: I never noticed before, but he’s kinda cute.
Darlyn: Just what do you think you’re looking at?
Kevin: I’m completely huggable!
Mayerline: Is it time for dessert yet?]

[Below: If only boys in the states learned to dance at such a young age…]





[Above: Alejandro gives his abuelita a card and a hug, after much prompting]

[Below: The kids of CAE1 with Enriqueta, Maritza, and Evelyn]



The next day saw another Grandparent’s Day celebration at a different center.



The program included a performance – written, directed, and produced by yours truly – of Pinocho. You know, the one about the puppet-boy whose nose grows when he tells a lie. That one.

[Below: Trying on Pinocho’s nose]





[Above: The theater troupe before their grand debut]

[Below: If you’ll recall, at one point Pinocho grows donkey ears]





[Above: I think he’s really excited to perform]

[Below: With my trusty Narrator]





[Above: Jiminy Cricket!]

For those of you who have facebook, I'll be putting together albums with additonal pics soon. Chao!

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

A Day in the Life

Some of you have expressed trouble visualizing what I do on a daily basis.

At the risk of being mundane, I will now attempt describe un día típico:

Step 1: Breakfast
I eat oatmeal every single day for breakfast. My host family thinks this exceedingly strange.

Step 2: Head to the barrio
This entails a ride on the Metrovía, Guayaquil’s public transit system. I walk four blocks from my house and pay 25 cents, the flat rate for all buses in the city, to ride one of those double buses with the accordion middle. This is probably the safest mode of transport in the city, including private car (riding in one of those, your life flashes before your eyes every fifteen seconds). I take the Metrovía all the way south, to the end of the line, and transfer to the Alimentador (literal translation: “the feeder”), a bus that services my barrio, Guasmo Sur. It’s gotten to the point that I know which drivers are really really bad at the whole stop-and-go thing and which ones realize ahead of time that they will be stopping at the next corner.

Step 3: Casita de Chocolate
When I first heard that INNFA’s (the organization I work with) community center is known as the “little chocolate house,” I wondered whether I were living in a fairy tale. No one quite knows why it is called the Casita de Chocolate; the likeliest explanation thus far is that it was at one point painted brown. If anyone has theories they’d care to share, I am willing to entertain them (read: willing to be entertained).

To get from the bus stop to the casita, I walk through a street market. Vendors set up tents lining both sides of the road. Stalls are filled with plastic tupperware, vegetables piled in pyramids of color, and fish dripping wet from the sea (or maybe just from the buckets of water periodically splashed over them to keep them glinting silver and fresh under the hot sun). A couple blocks down, on the corner, I can see the compound with the casita and the health center, surrounded by mango and lime and papaya trees.

When I get to the casita, Nelly, Rosa, and Sylvia are there. I touch my cheek to each of theirs and greet them Buenos días. As usual, they have the TV on and are watching their morning soaps as they go about organizing files and receipts. Rosa, being the guardian and unofficial inhabitant of the casita, doesn’t touch the paperwork, but sits and beams at me as if I were her six-year-old daughter and had just given her a fingerpainting resembling nothing in particular that she is now going to display on the refrigerator.

Most mornings I stay in the casita and hold refuerzo, small group tutoring sessions with children in the INNFA program who are behind in math and reading. We play math games, have spelling contests, and generally wind up playing soccer the last 10 minutes of class.

On occasion, María José, who is my age, picks me up, and we walk to where she works at one of INNFA’s preschools. The children here crave attention – emotional, nutritional, hygienic. I’m reminded of something my friend George wrote upon getting to his own site: “What Guangaje needs is a massive investment of money, and the experts to make that money work. What it will get is a medley of government organizations, international nonprofits, and me, a twenty-five year old volunteer with a background in writing and architectural theory.” Coming face to face with the bare need in Guasmo Sur makes me question whether I am qualified to address it: “Hello, Need, I’m Jordan. So…have you heard of the Oxford comma?” Somehow I don’t think the Oxford comma is going to make much of an impact in the barrio. What George goes on to point out, though, is that Peace Corps and its volunteers focus on the sustainability of a project, “whether it will have a life of its own after the volunteer goes home and the money runs out…That’s why so many of the volunteers’ projects in Ecuador are focused on education; the belief is that by spreading accurate information, people will be capable of initiating their own projects, and continuing existing ones.” Let’s not forget that the volunteers are not the only ones learning. Last week I was reminded all over again of the enthralling power of a story when the kids crowded around to listen and watch and touch the pages of Curious George and the Firefighters. En español, of course.

Step 4: Almuerzo
Usually I find myself catching the Metrovía back out of the barrio for lunch: the casita ladies don’t make time to eat, and it would be more than a little rude to eat in front of them. Since it’s not the best idea for me to eat alone in the barrio, I’ll chow down in a restaurant closer to home – or, if I’m lucky, Lupe will have fixed me a treat.


[Above: Caldo de broccoli con canguil / broccoli soup with popcorn]


[Above: Ecuador's national dish - arroz con pollo]


[Above: Fresh-squeezed OJ to wash it all down]

Step 5: Por la tarde
Afternoons in Guayaquil are hot. Thank goodness I put on 70spf sunscreen this morning. The Metrovía at this time of day is crowded, too, with kids getting out of class (schooldays here run from 7am-12:30pm or from 2pm-7pm) and people heading home for almuerzo.

Some afternoons are repeats of the morning routine, with students who have school in the morning coming to the casita for extra help in the afternoon.

Just as often, I head down the street to visit one of INNFA’s other refuerzo centers. When I walk through the doorway of CAE 1, the kids all shout my name and smile, and I feel like a celebrity. Due to issues with the previous building in which this particular center was run, Maritza has been hosting the after-school program in her own home, cooking lunch every weekday for 20 children and clearing out her living room so they have a space to eat and do homework. When I arrive, Maritza asks me if I’ve eaten yet and hands me a plate before I can answer. I greet Enriqueta and Evelyn, the volunteer teachers, and they call me tía, making me feel right at home.

For the next three hours, I help the kids with their homework and lead them in educational games and activities once they’ve completed their assignments.

This month, I’ve been working with the kids at CAE 1 and in the casita to complete encuestas, interviews about their lives that will eventually help me write a community diagnostic. Every Peace Corps Volunteer is required to do this diagnostic in their first three months at site. “So how have you diagnosed your community?” one friend asks. “Sore throat and runny nose? Prescription of take two and call me in the morning?” Ah, if only it were that simple. The idea is for us to integrate into the community, familiarize ourselves with its people, resources, and needs, and draw up a plan of action that will be a foundation for the work we do over the next two years. In mid-November, my entire PCV training group will convene to present our findings to the group, share our experiences, and help each other plan future projects at site.

Step 6: Heading Home
It’s the end of the day, and Enriqueta, Evelyn, and I leave CAE 1 and walk through the barrio to the bus stop. Evelyn’s youngest son, David, runs ahead of us, darts to grab a stick out of the road, then drops it and experiments with twining his legs together and hopping as a mode of transportation, gives up, and jumps about screaming just for the fun of it. Across from the bus stop, Enriqueta treats me to a snack of grilled sheep guts with banana. The tough, stringy intestines wreak havoc on my gums, but the flavor is so good...

Step 7: Back at the Ranch
As I get off the Metrovía and walk the blocks homeward, the sun is already low in the sky. Everyone on this street has a dog, and I note them all in my head as I pass by their gated yards: the hyperactive black collie, the sleepy mutt who curls up in the corner of the garage, the yappy twin terriers, the mopey mastiff who stares wistfully out through the gate. And then a parakeet, just to liven things up.

I walk in the convenience store and grocery my host family owns, up the back staircase, and change into my running gear: time to train for the 5k I’ll be running this weekend. The park near my house is one of my favorite places, and I’ve found quiet there many times already with a book or an ice cream cone, and now in my jogging shorts. Perhaps my favorite part of the run, though, is turning the corner home: Peter’s official job is to sit on the balcony of my family’s house and keep watch for ladrones (burglars), but I like to think of him as my own personal cheerleader. “Eso!” he shouts when he sees me coming, pumping his fist in the air, "That's right!"

Now it’s time for a shower (only cold water here), dinner (omelette, anyone?), perhaps a game of cards or helping Marcelo and Andrés with their homework. Prepare a lesson plan for tomorrow, curl up with a book…or a blog post…lights out;
wake to my alarm clock at seven;
get out of bed;
repeat.