Editorial note: It appears that we left this blog unposted. We are attempting to post it again. it was from the middle of the month of September, I believe.
One Sunday morning we went with Elder and Sister Call to visit a Maternity hospital. A family from the States was visiting Guatemala and had hundreds of gift packages for newborns that the Young Women in their ward had assembled. Each kit was in a large Ziplock bag and contained a receiving blanket, a hat, a onesie, socks, a couple of diapers and a stuffed animal toy. On that particular day there were about twenty women and their babies in the facility. We gave the gifts and saw that many of the women were teenagers with their first child, but there were several older women who had other children at home. The expectant mothers come to these government hospitals just to give birth and are allowed to stay for 24 hours for free. The cenyer is wonderful because it is clean and provides safe delivery, rest, care and training by trained doctors and nurses for one day. If there are complications, the patients are sent to a regular hospital for treatment. One baby died on the morning we visited, and I thought how difficult it must have been for the woman to be there with all the others and their babies and she alone. I think the young girls from the visiting family were struck with the realization of how these teenage mothers had ended their childhood and limited their life possibilities at a very young age.
A couple of weeks ago we invited the sister missionaries, Sis. Espinoza from Nigaragua and Sis. Bates from Wyoming, serving in our ward to come to dinner after church and then we would go visiting with them to people they were teaching. I was excited to have company for Sunday dinner and decided to fix Dr. Pepper Pork (pulled pork sandwiches) with these beautiful,flavorful, moist and delicious wheat rolls. We made a fresh green salad with all the "biocided" vegetables, and for dessert I made lemon cake. When we arrived at church we ran into the missionaries and made plans to meet after the meetings. Sister Bates said, "I forgot to tell you about my allergies. I'm allergic to pork, flour, corn and beans." I couldn't believe that her allergies matched my menu so perfectly. I spent the two hours in Stake Conference worrying about what I had to feed Sis. Bates instead of trying to understand what the speakers were saying in SPANISH. We ended up making an emergency and delicious dish of rice, canned chicken and Ortega chilies so Sis. Bated didn't starve.
After dinner we visited three families. The first visit was an eye-opener for us. We went to an industrial part of town and parked the car near what looked like a broken down cinder block fence. Covering the rubble was a large piece of corragated tin which we moved aside to enter into a littered path. As we walked along we saw small ratty, skinny and cowering dogs, and dirty barefoot children playing. We passed three rooms, for lack of a better term, which were made from the stacked, cinder blocks, more pieces of tin, plastic tarps, cardboard, and any piece of wood the people could find. When we got to Jorge's house, we were greeted by his mother and sister and were invited into their home which was the size of Zach's bedroom. We sat on a bunkbed, upside-down buckets, and one chair while we visited and sang with this family. The only light in the house came through cracks and gaps between cinder blocks and the tin and the tarps; no light or lamp. There was a small table and a hot plate to cook on, no cupboard or refrigerator. On the table were a few dishes and pots and a package of tortillas covered with large ants. We talked to the mom and then her son came in. He is 17 years old and is the only member of the church. He goes to school, works part time, and goes to seminary every day. He is clean, handsome and bright and the breadwinner of his family. I hope he can break out of the poverty, by staying in school and eventually serving a mission so he can see a different life, learn about cleanliness, develop work ethics, and set goals.
The next family lived in much better conditions. This time we opened a gate in a wall along a clean sidewalk. We see these walls and gates everywhere, but never knew what was behind. We found a dirt lane with small houses along both sides. This time we entered a small path through a small yard with a vegetable garden. The house was very small, but was clean, light and orderly. The whole family were members of the church and they were very welcoming. We all sat down and sang a song and read the scriptures and shared our testimonies of the Book of Mormon. We read together from 2 Nephi where it talks about why Jesus was baptized even though He was perfect. Migda was studying with the missionaries and preparing for her baptism. I loved being there; it was why I wanted to go on a mission: to teach the gospel.
On Sept. 1 we loaded up the vans and headed on another remote site trip to Esquipulas in the southern part of Guatemala near the border with Honduras. We arrived at the home of the Danielsons and loaded everything into one van and left that car in their driveway. That way the dental equipment was safe in their gated and guarded community. We all piled into the other van along with the Danielsons and took off for Copan, Honduras. We crossed the border at about 5:00, but it was raining so hard that it could have been midnight. The skies were black. We had traveled through the storm with low visability and the fear of rock slides. All along the roads huge rocks the size of the car together with smaller rocks, gravel, water and mud forced traffic to travel from one side of the road to a single lane on the other. Any dangerous road condition is marked by tree branches and bushes dragged out into the road across the lane. The weather cleared just when we got to the border so the guys were able to take the passports and visas to show to the border patrol without walking in the rain. We arrived in Copan at Don Udo's Hotel just in time for dinner followed by a fun game of Mexican Train until 11:30.| Marvin, our guide. |
On Sunday morning we went to church in a small chapel about 5 blocks from our hotel. The people were friendly and welcoming. We attended all the classes exactly the same lessons we would have had in Guatemala City or Downey. As our Sunday School class began, a man came in with a backpack filled with suckers. He passed them out to everyone who wanted one. The dental team all exchanged glances and had a glimpse of what we should expect the next day.
| Jorge |
When we arrived home, we heard about the volcanic eruption of Fuego. We previously sent a picture of that volcano from La Reunion, the hotel we stayed at in Antigua. It was sending up smoke then, but on Friday it erupted spewing out smoke, ash, fire and lava. Thirty-three thousand people were evacuated because of the gases and ash including all the people at La Reunion. Today at church we talked to a couple who are serving near Fuego and they said it's back to normal now and all the people have returned home. Because of the problems in the Middle East with riots and the raids on the American Embassy where the ambassador and three others were killed in Lybia and the American School was looted and destroyed in Egypt, and the rioting in Sudan, we were advised to stay indoors on Friday and Saturday. The area office and the embassy felt it was not safe for Americans.Things were already unusual in Guatemala because Saturday was their Independence Day. On Friday we went to the temple at 6:00AM and there was no traffic at all. At 9:00 we screened missionaries at the CCM (MTC) next door to the temple, and then stopped at the market on the way home. We were home by 12:00 and felt safe all the time. Later in the day we heard fireworks, which is normal here and didn't see or hear anything unusual.
On Saturday morning ten missionary couples went over to our ward building at 9:00 to have a Guatemalan breakfast and to celebrate Independence Day. We were the first to arrive and helped set up tables and chairs. We thought about going to McDonalds for sausage Mc Muffins because the breakfast turned out to be lunch and finally started at 11:15. They sang their national song, and then had little presentations about each Central American country and then we ate foods from those places. We were a bit afraid to eat the food, but because we were very hungry by this time and because it looked good, we all ate. None of us had any problems and the the food was delicious. That afternoon we all gathered on the rooftop and celebrated Independence Day with a potluck dinner. It was fun to sit and talk and eat Wayne's black beans prepared in his new bean pot seasoned with a green banana before use. Everything else was yummy too.
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| Goat milk mustache |
Another regular on our route to the clinic is an old one-legged woman who begs from the same spot every day. Dr. Johnson always slows down to give her a quetz and she makes her way nearer the curb to get his coin. Now we give her money too, because she recognizes the car and expects it. She always says, "Gracias," and follows it with a blessing that we never hear the end of because we are forced by traffic to keep moving.
Love and miss you all, but we keep busy enough to enjoy life like never before.
