So much has happened the last 2
weeks it is difficult to believe it has only been 2 weeks. We are writing this 24 June 2012.
Figure 169 Family Vehicle
We visited the branch in Consuelo
and attended their meetings on Sunday.
This is a little branch about a 2 hour drive in a eastern direction from
our home a new area for us. The branch
president is a young return missionary doing a monumental job against great
odds. We explained to him how we as
humanitarian missionaries could help him help the poor in his area. The above
picture is pretty typical—not an exceptional thing. This is a family on their way home from
church. The dad took the kids home, then
came back for mom and the little girl.
Figure 170 Pres. Almonte and
Elder Haws
During the week we drove to Santiago
about a 3 hour drive to the north to attend an event where we donated some
things to a Catholic Orphanage. On the
way another car clipped our front bumper and kept driving. Pres Almonte gave me a metal clothes hanger
and we were able to wire it back together.
The next week I backed into another
car and caved in the back door. We lost
the day hunting up the owner and then going with him to the police station to
report the accident. That is how things
are done here On the way home from Santiago, Edith bought a colorful rug from these ladies.
It is common to see people sitting on chairs in front of their houses or on the sidewalk playing dominoes, the national past time.
We took the time on a Monday to go on a short excursion with Dennis and Diana Despain. We went to tourist shop where Edith bought a ring made of laramar and we toured Bolivar park.
The Despains are temple works and do not have a car assigned to them, so they are appreciative of us scheduling our time once in a while to take them places. The have a pretty standard routine every week with specific assignments and days they are to work. On the other hand we make our own schedule and do whatever we want, when we want with our own car.
Later in the week we drove 4 hours
north to Puerto Plata. We visited one of
the popular spots on the island, the Teleferico. It is a cable car that takes you to the top
of a high mountain to where a statue of Christ has been constructed at a
beautiful over look point of the bay far below.
Fig 175
Fig 176
Fig 177
The reason we drove to Puerto Plata
was to discuss a water project in 3 little communities: Cabirma, Pozo Prieto and Cabia. This is a project started by the previous
missionaries. Following the pattern we
established on other projects, we involved the stake president immediately at
the beginning of the project. He called
a meeting for the mayor of the community, members of the water committee, a
contractor and a representative of CARITAS a Catholic Charitable organization
and us to discuss and plan the project.
The stake president took charge, conducted a wonderful meeting that was
very productive. The following picture
is of the committee put together for the project.
Fig 178
Fig 179
After the meeting at the church
house, members of the water committee to us to visit the proposed water project
site. Our first visit was to see a pump
the church has installed 10 years ago.
It is still working fine. There
were people that used the pump while we were there. As we learn more about the project, we will
need to determine how many people are using the pump and what the current
conditions are. It doesn’t make sense to
spend money on a location that has water when other locations are suffering
much more.
In another part of town they have an
electrical submersible pump that supplies part of the community with
water. They have no tank so they turn
the pump on for 3 hours every other day.
When the pump is running people open a water tape that allows the water
to run into a small tank in each home.
Well their individual tank is full, they turn the tap off and those
higher on the system can fill their tanks.
The families have to make it last until when the pump is turned on
again.
Fig 180
Fig 181
The committee drove us to the top of
a little knoll where they envisioned installing a new water tank. Throughout the trip Wallace was taking
readings with his GPS unit to determine location and elevation for the important
locations of the project. There turns out to be only a few homes who have absolutely
no easy water supply. These people have to haul all their water and purchase
clean water with a huge percentage of their monthly income.
The last location they took us to, we had a
very big surprise. There stood a large
concrete water tank about 40’ square.
The committee explained it had been installed by the government 10 years
ago. There were no pipes to it and no
pipes leading from it. We didn’t explain
to them or try to show our astonishment at this discovery. Wallace is absolutely sure there is a
detailed water study someplace justifying the expense to install such a large
water tank. The water committee is
ignoring the existence of this perfectly good water tank and intending to
install a completely new one.
It seems to us that we are finding
that many of the humanitarian projects implemented in the past were done on a
whim without a thorough examination of costs, options, or social impact or
need. In this case, the prior
missionaries we advancing rapidly to do whatever the citizens wanted without
requiring community involvement and without examining thoroughly. We discovered when we returned home and
entered the GPS points into our program that the existing tank is actually the
highest point in the system, so there doesn’t make any sense to install a new
expensive water tank. We assigned a
member of the water committee to go do the research at the government and find
out what the water service area was for the tank. The overall cost of the project will be
greatly reduced is all we have to do is run a little bit of pipe to the new
tank.
We are reminded over and over that
these projects are “Social” projects more than anything else.
Fig 182
This week the Kelvyn and Kaye
Cullimore, Short Term Specialist came to spend the week with us. They are responsible for the Food and
Wheelchair Major Initiatives in many parts of the world. We visited a lot of places as part of their
stop here on their way to Haiti. We
visited more places than we can recount as we inspected our wheelchair partners
and discussed a Food Initiative with several small branches of the church in
San Juan de La Maguana, Azua, Bonao and Santo Domingo. We also visited the Ministry of Agricultural
to see if we could partner with them to start some projects. We found out they have a lot of resources
including free seeds. They showed us an
elevated box they designed that people can put on top of their roofs if they do
not have any garden at their homes
Fig 183
Fig 184
We visited with a branch president
of a little congregation who had had chickens at one time. His experience is demonstrative of the reason
why we have decided not to include chickens in this first food project. He has no job. Somehow he scraped together enough money to
buy 20 chicks. He raised them to the
point they were laying eggs. Then every
time one of his members came to the house and asked him for an egg, he would
let them rob the coop. His family rarely
got to eat any eggs. One by one his
family ate a chicken until they were all gone and he had no more chickens. That is exactly why we don’t want to spend a
bunch of money on chickens until we can figure out how to control the project. We decided to stick with gardens because they
are less complicated.
Fig 185
We are getting calls from all over
the place about the food project. Here
we are considering the possibility of using land owned by the church for a
community garden. There are so many social
problems associated with it, I have little hopes this kind of project would
ever be approved.
Fig 186
As part of our wondering around we
took a short detour and visited a Church camp in Bonao. The next few pictures are of the camp. We were totally blown away. How is it possible the church spent this kind
of money in a poverty stricken 3rd world country like the Dominican Republic?
Fig 187
Fig 188
Fig 189
Fig 190
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