|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
CHILDREN: Supporting dignified education for indigenous children in the Sierra Madre
All of the work of the Sexto Sol Center benefits children.The Sierra Madre of Chiapas is home to the Mocho, Mam and Kachiquel peoples. In Mexico there is a separate educational system for indigenous children which leaves schools struggling with inadequate funding, facilities and materials. People are concerned that their languages and cultural expression have suffered as a result of past discrimination. The Sexto Sol Center is committed to assisiting them as they work to find ways to revitalize their cultures. Education can be an important part of that process as well its being the fundamental way a child gains the a tools to construct a way out of poverty. The Sexto Sol Center advocates for the right of all children to receive a quality education that honors the history and culture of their community. Since 2005 we have been working with parents´ organizations to improve school grounds and buildings and to find ways to make the indigneous culture and language more central to instruction. We have also provided over $2,000 dollars worth of books to the community library in Nuevo Bullaj, Guatemala. You can read about this effort below. We currently have a campaign to raise funds to make needed improvements to 5 schools and more as outlined below. In addition we plan to establish a borrowing system for the library in Nuevo Bullaj community that will serve 300 children.
Left: Students in Nuevo Bullaj, Guatemala, Right: 74 children attend this dirt-floor school in the flood zone built of a discarded road sign and plastic
HELP US REACH OUR FUNDING GOALS TO IMPROVE EDUCATION FOR OVER 800 CHILDREN:
Recent AccomplishmentsBOOKS, BOOKS, AND MORE BOOKS! Corporate sponsors:
Royal Coffee of California made a generous gift for the Nuevo Bullaj library in Guatemala. Special thanks to Melinda Matson for her contribution of books for Nuevo Bullaj.
PROVIDING BOOKS TO ENCOURAGE READING AND IMPROVE EDUCATION Sexto Sol provides books to schools in the poorest communities where they will most benefit children. Escuela Bilingue Estado de Colima (see painting project below) inaugurated a new library in May, 2007 to hold the books that Sexto Sol contributed: In 2006 The Sexto Sol Center made a substantial contribution of books to this school that serves indigneous children in the high mountains. Due to our involvement with teachers and parents toward improving the school, the school won a status that earned them additional teaching materials and other support from a state program that rewards schools where there is demonstrated commitment to improve.
New library a far cry from the original shelf with a few books
Reference books provided to the UNICACH university: UNICACH is the only center of higher learning in the Sierra Madre. Students from the mountain communities prepare for careers in agronomy, environmental science and other fields. Resources are very limited and currently the classes are held in the old high school that was abandoned due to flood damage. Since its beginning four years ago, students have used our Escuela de Agroecología y Permacultura Tierra Linda as a resource and we have assisted students who seek our advice for developing their thesis. Among the first graduates are two students we mentored.
Sexto Sol delivered an 18 volume set of encyclopedias to the Escuela Secundaria Tecina #41: The school provides technical education in agronomy and other practical fields to Mam children in the high country. The principal of the school encourages teachers to strive for excellence in teaching the students from surrounding communities where most families live in poverty. Former students nominated the school to receive the encyclopedias which are an important addition to their small library. The encyclopedias were contributed to Sexto Sol by the publisher Barsa Planeta. Photo: Volunteers Eliazin Cifuentes (center)and Ranulfo Cifunentes (far right) with Tamara looking at the encyclopedias with the principal and librarian
School supplies for remote schools: Sexto Sol volunteers Ranulfo and Eliazin delivered schools supplies, art supplies, posters of cultures and nature, and books to 7 one-room schools in remote communities in the Sierra and to the bilingual schools in Motozintla.
HANDMADE BENCHES PROVIDE A PLACE TO READ AND PLAY
Francisco Barrios, Program Coordinator, builds wooden benches for schools The schools have no formal play areas, no recreational equipment and no trees. Francisco wants to change that and these benches are the beginning of his effort to make attractive play and study areas for the children. In 2006, Artist and illustrator Diane Lees painted delightful designs on dozens of benches. Five schools have already received benches and we receive requests from communities very far into the mountains for more.
USING ART TO ENCOURGE RESPECT FOR CULTURE AND THE ENVIRONMENT: Diane Lees also painted original art for posters with environmental messages in Mocho and Mam. These posters are distributed to the schools.
Josue organized the Na Balom center in San Cristobal de las Casasa to sponsor a drive to collect notebooks, art supplies and books in Mocho and Mam languages. Teachers here were pleased to receive the much needed supplies.
HELPING PARENTS BRING IN MORE LIGHT TO THEIR CHILDREN'S CLASSROOMS
The Escuela Primaria Colima serves 260 elementary school children from the most impoverished community in the Sierra, El Malé. Most of the year the climate is harsh with fog, heavy rain and biting cold. With poor lighting, broken windows and no heat, on the coldest days, teachers take the children outside to sit in the soft sunlight since it is too cold to work inside. Sexto Sol plans to continue working with the parents and teachers to eliminate the flooding during the rainy season and build walls to the dining hall at the boading facility. Hurricane Stan struck the region the day before we were to work at this school. As soon as we could get through the debris, we worked with the parents to paint the dark classrooms light colors to bring in more light. Contributors to this project made it possible for Sexto Sol to help parents enjoy the satisfaction of making improvements themselves to their childrens' school. The faces of the painting crew say it all!
MORE PROJECTS TO SUPPORT CHILDREN FROM REMOTE COMMUNITIES The Albuergue Providencia is a boarding house run by Catholic nuns to provide a safe place for young girls to stay while they study in Motozintla. Girls come from remote communities without schools. We have provided assistance to the Sisters for several years. In 2003 we provided permaculture training to the parents of the girls. In 2004 we built large planters for vegetable production to allow the Sisters to include vegetables in the food the girls eat. We continue to maintain the garden there. Escuela Secundaria Tecnica #122, Bajucu, Las Margaritas - creating a permatulture demnostration center for boarding school for 260 Tojolobal-speaking children. Sexto Sol asssited the faculty to obtain funds to build a greenhouse for vegetable production and teaching purposes.
Nutritional Support for malnourished school children: Blue-Green Algae Thanks to a generous donation of a super-food by Klamath Blue Green, Inc in 2000 we provided nutritional algae, high in minerals and vitamins, for 60 second and third graders at a rural school in the heart of the coffee producing region. Two teachers gave the children these tablets daily at the school. They noticed that the children, many of whom were malnourished, showed better concentration and memory retention.
SOLAR OVENS CAN KEEP CHILDREN IN SCHOOL Anyone who has traveled in Central America has probably seen children laboring along the side of the road under the weight of unwieldy bundles of firewood, machete dangling from their belts. Cooking with a solar oven means that families do not have to send their children out to cut firewood, a tedious and ecologically damaging practice. Sexto Sol teaches people how to make and use solar ovens that cook food with the sun.
HELPING CHILDREN COPE WITH THE TRAUMA OF HURRICANE STAN
In response to the massive numbers of people affected by the hurricane, Sexto Sol sponsored a training for medical professionals and traditional doctors in a technique to treat trauma and stress. Dr. Tamara Brennan, Executive Director has been treating children and their families ever since. We put out a call to knitters to make hats for children who lost their homes in the flood. The response to the "HATS FOR KIDS CHALLENGE" was fantastic. See the Hurricane Stan section for more information on Sexto Sol's assistance to survivors. Reconstruction, including emotional recovery, will take many years.
| |||||||||||||||||||||||