Receiving, and applying for $$$$ dolla dolla bills for small sustainable development projects. That’s what I have been up to these last 2 weeks. There is nothing like cold hard cash to get you out of a slump. I had been feeling a little lethargic the last month or so, until I found out on the same day that I just received 2 grants (one after 9 months of waiting). The long awaited grant is to help fund activities for my sex-ed/HIV course for pre-teen and teenagers. I started the class with out the funds and am not about to graduate my second course… I had almost given up hope when I found a large lump sum in my bank account. I quickly made a new account for the new funds, as to not by accidentally spend them on empanadas.
Sunday, April 25, 2010
Money Money Money
Thursday, April 8, 2010
Holidays!!!
So I realized I may have broke my every 2-week blog entry new years goal. But, who really keeps their new years resolutions? Have you kept yours?
Accepting my defeat and moving forward let me tell you about 2 of the biggest holidays/ elongated vacations in the Dominican Republic. Carnaval and Semana Santa.
Carnaval is a pagan celebration that results in huge parades and parties every Sunday in February. It culminates in the biggest, most badass party on the Dominican Republic’s Independence Day, February 27th. Many of the large cities hold their own distinct parade, but the biggest is known to be in La Vega (just down the highway from my site!). The parades could be compared to a Mardi Gras like setting with elaborate costumes, lots of food, drink, and music. The parades consist of Diablos (Devils that look like Dragons), in many different beautiful costumes. The Diablos carry around pig bladders covered in colored latex, and they will hit innocent passerbies if they stumble into the street (sidewalks are safe), accept on Independence Day when anywhere is fair game! You can also by these big bladders from street vendors, for the price of US$1. I have one covered in pink flowers. But putting these pig bladders in the common persons hand is a dangerous game. Some people think its fun to fill theie pig bladder with rocks instead of air, which makes for a quite a painful hit! (Kids think this is extra especially funny… little brats!)
I visited Carnaval 3 times this year. Twice in La Vega (one of them being Independence Day), and I went to go see Carnaval in Santiago. I was able to make it out of the festivities pretty unharmed. This was partially due to a friend, whom after a few drinks, liked to willingly go into the street and take most of the brunt of the golpes (hits) by pig bladder. (Picture above). That night there was a great concert from and Puerto Rican band (a little ironic on the Dominican Independence Day but o well). The night got even more interesting as a man with a very large snake came through, and we decided to have a photo shoot with it.
All I can say is the Dominicans sure know how to celebrate their Independence!
This last week was another huge Dominican holiday, Semana Santa (Holy Week). Almost everyone takes the full week off and visits family, goes to the beach, and to church. Thursday, Friday, and Saturday are the days with the most church activities. I would even say that Good Friday was a bigger deal than Easter Sunday. On Good Friday, none of the colmados (convenient stores) can play music. The town was very pleasantly peaceful. Almost everything is shut down. Villa Cruz, the living cross, is a very popular ritual. Usually the church youth group puts on a play of the crucifixion of Jesus that processes through the community. I was able to go last year, but when I went this year, I ended up just with just a normal mass. At the end of mass we did do a once around circle in the community, but no play. You can’t win them all.
For most of Semana Santa, I helped out my friend in the next community over build a basketball court with a group of Americans who came to help out. We laid the cement, and then once it dried, the last day we taught the kids in the community basketball and volleyball technique. It was a blast, and my friend did an amazing job coordinating it all!
Although I did not make it to a beach, I did make it to a water park. A water park? Yes, there is a water park here just about 15 minutes from my house. They had a really good lineup of concerts going on there last Saturday. A few friends and I went and danced in our bathing suits, it was a pretty good time. I went down 2 slides (there was only about 5, and 2 you needed to rent a tube, but they had run out). They had some other pools, and a decent stage, so I was pretty impressed. I had come with real low expectations aka I was expecting a glorified plastic kiddie pool.
I also had a small Easter Party to lure my kids to my sex-ed class during the week. We painted eggs with juice packets, and I made some really funny faces. I also made a cake with jelly beans (thanks mom). I tried to explain the neo-paganism significance of the hare and egg as signs of the fertility of Mother Earth and the bountifulness of spring, but I think that flew right over their heads. But they had their eggs and sugar, hopefully learned something, and had a good time, so it went pretty well.
Semana Santa was a great week, but now its back to work! Well hopefully, no one showed up to our artisan meeting Monday, the Dominicans like easing back into things. I am trying to catch on.
O before I forget… a recipe for a Dominican favorite for Semana Santa
Habichuelas con Dulce (Beans with sugar)
Puree in a blender cooked red beans, ½ pound of sugar, vanilla, sweet potato, short bread cookies, milk, and coconut milk.
Add a few whole beans for effect, and chill.
It is actually really delicious, but be careful to not eat this whole serving. You may go into diabetic shock!
Monday, March 1, 2010
Food and Fun


Happy Belated Valentines Day everyone! Also, happy Independence Day for the Dominican Republic, Japan, and Korea!
Monday, February 8, 2010
Medical Missions and More
So when I last left you I was about to leave for a medical mission up in the mountains. I left with a bunch of my close friends from the economic development sector to go help a fellow volunteer with translating for a medical mission in her town where she started a hospital, and her mom and fellow doctors were coming to train the doctors and nurses on the new equipment they were donating.... Sustainability! Great! But wow was this ride cozy. In Dominican Fashion they squished more people in the guagua (a run down van) then you would ever think is humanly possible. (A rather large dominican lady insisted sitting in the front seat with Justin and I and the chofer, and then continuously complained that she was uncomfortable, no duh lady!) So I was basically squished for a good hour and half up the mountain, but I made the most of it and sung the entire way up.
Thursday, January 28, 2010
Starting Back Up
I have been back for about 3 weeks now, and things seem like they are just beginning to start back up. There has been a seemingly endless amount of holidays this month (last weekend was a 5 day weekend!). It is either a Saint Day or a historical day and then lets just add on some more days just for fun. So hopefully tomorrow we will have a first artisan meeting of the year pero vamos a ver, si dios quiere (We will see if God wishes), which is always the response. Hopefully we will though because we need to talk about the urgent situation, of the artisan building, which may be taken away this month! This is because the artisans have had an impending debt for 5 years, and we have tried many quotas, but no artisans seem to care to pay. I have tried peer pressure, a payment plan, star charts, but to no avail so maybe this will be good for them to finally see the consequences of their lack of action. Anyways since the bank came this week, I am hoping it will force a meeting (fingers crossed).
On brighter news, 2 weeks ago I started my second round of a health/ sex-ed course which focuses on preventing HIV/AIDS and youth pregnancies. The kids whom graduated my last class are now teaching along with my help. The last class was a little unruly, so I had to give them a talking to (Please only come if you want to learn etc.), I told them I was sad with how they were acting because I don’t know the word for disappointed, but I think they got the picture. Some of the little hellions can be seen above, posing sadly (they love staged photos)! If any of you teachers have any good suggestions for controlling students, let me know! I do really enjoy the class, so I have hope they will calm down a little, although the next week is about body parts, so I think the snickers are unavoidable!
So my favorite new project is a women’s exercise/health class, that I started having once a week. Think jazzer-size meets yoga and overweight donas (housewives), jumping around in circles, kind of to a hip hop beat! IT IS HILARIOUS to say the least. I will maybe try to video it one week for your viewing pleasure. The women seem to be loving the class though. I have organized it into a mash-up of weightwatchers and fitness class. I bought a cheap scale, and made them small health booklets where they write down their health goals and keep track of their weight every week. I have been giving them homework every week too. This week is to try to drink 8 glasses of water a day and not to drink soda. Most of the health problems here seem to be closely linked to a lack of knowledge on diet and exercise, so I hope to help educate the woman and thus their families while jumping around to GIRL TALK and other ridiculous hip-hop jams. I knew all those exercise classes and tapes would pay off!
Last but not least… more Haiti updates from the DR. A few friends have been to the southern border working in the clinics in the town Jimani. There are two clinics functioning. One is American run and pretty well organized, and one Dominican clinic, which apparently is considerably less organized. Although originally the borders were more or less open to Haitians whom needed medical care, it seems now that Haitians are being turned away at the border, so some volunteers left early because there wasn’t enough for them to do. It is really a shame. Furthermore, I believe that there has been some negative propoganda on the news stations. Hatian attacks on relief are not often and I think portrayed out of context. Small towns are pulling together to help each other, and are really being helpful letting Aid workers know where the more needy people are. Furthermore, I believe that the roads although not great are passable. From those on the border, it seems that the roads were probably always bad and it is not so much due to the earthquake as it is portrayed.
Right now, there are a few Americans in my town that were solicited to help with getting water filters over to Haiti and to just generally help out. It has been nice to have other Americans in town, and I have felt helpful, translating for them and helping them get acquainted here. They have both passed on my name to other relief efforts. One is to help translate with aid relief. The other is to help logistically coordinate aid with a bunch of different NGOs. I haven’t heard too much yet, but I hope I will be able to get involved in one-way or another.
To come… This upcoming week I am translating for a medical mission of doctors which are coming to my friend’s site to the new hospital she facilitated opening. Sadly, the night before the med mission, I will be heading to the capital to say goodbye to one of my best friends in Peace Corps whom has decided to leave early because of his life at home. Hopefully we will send him off right, typical dancing with live music at ancient ruins might be in the plans, so stay tuned!
Side note: If you are interested in reading about Haiti, two books of interest are Mountains Beyond Mountains (a biography of Paul Farmer), and Farming for Bones which I believe talks about Haitian Dominican relations. They were suggested by me from one of the American volunteers helping with Haiti relief, whom lived in Haiti for 4 years.
Until next time… stay warm and plan your visit here!
Wednesday, January 20, 2010
More Haiti Relief Info.


Here are a few other resources for the relief situation in Haiti.
PEACE CORPS
Peace Corps suggests checking out these two websites for making donations. www.charitynavigator.org & www.cnn.com/impact.
WATER FILTERS
As most of you know, my project is to work with ceramic artisans, and my Host Dad makes water filters which are connected to an American company called FilterPure. Right now they are taking donations to buy filters to supply Haiti, below is information.
Only $30 will provide clean water for a family of 6 and can be their lifeline at this time of tragedy. Check out our facebook cause for updates on Filter Pure International or the FilterPure website.
We have a goal to raise $50,000 to buy 2,000 filters and ship them into the country. We have a FilterPure distributor in Haiti, but all of our filters were destroyed in the earthquake so we must ship them from the Dominican Republic.
OTHER INFO.
Also if you know anyone whom has family or friends in Haiti, networks have been established to help people connect with loved ones lost in the quake:
ü Americans with family in Haiti should contact the U.S. State Department Operations Center at 1-888-407-4747.
ü Red Cross Missing Persons Database: http://www.familylinks.icrc.org/haiti
ü Post your missing loved one on the Haiti missing people board and the EARTHQUAKE HAITI Facebook groups.
In my town, the school has been collecting local donations and the Catholic Church has been donating its collections for the week.
Since, as Peace Corps volunteers we are restricted from going into Haiti, volunteers have been giving a hand with organizations in the capital such as USAID in coordinating relief. I hope to be able to help out in the upcoming in weeks.
Thank you to everyone for all your emails and concerns. It was very touching to hear how much everyone has been thinking of me.
Friday, January 15, 2010
A Dizzying Experience
So let me wipe the dust off my blog, and I hope to deliver to you guys a better or more frequent update on my happenings in Peace Corps Dominican Republic.
A DIZZYING EXPERIENCE
I returned to the Dominican Republic the first week after New Years, and I am right now just getting back into the swing of things. Yesterday, we had our first library meeting of the New Year, to talk about further construction and programs to be planned for students in the library. A fellow friend and I went after the meeting to go talk to the director of the high school. We asked if he could create a list of 10 of the brightest senior students, and we would offer them the opportunity to do their required service hours in the library. While standing in the school, things suddenly began to move in a circular manner, almost like the school was made of Jell-O. My whole vision was wobbling like something out of Alice and Wonderland, and I thought I was dizzy and going to faint. My first thoughts were “Wow I just got really sick, and I’m going to faint.” And/OR “Wow this school is really made poorly, it’s shaking from all the students.” We all had gone silent, and took a moment to realize that everyone else had felt the same sensation. Then someone addressed the elephant in the school. We just experienced a terremoto, AN EARTHQUAKE.
Being born and raised on the East Coast, I had never experienced an earthquake. That’s why I didn’t realize at first what was happening. I also didn’t realize the impact that this wobbling had created. With no experience with earthquakes, I first assumed that this was an isolated small quake and I did not think much of it. Then the phone calls began to ring. My friend is an emergency coordinator for the Peace Corps and she had to get contact with all volunteers on our region especially those on the coast because of the threat of a typhoon. Then there were the calls from family, and emails from friends, and I began to learn that what I had thought was just a wobble had created devastation just across the border. I initially called my friends whom were near the border, and it appears that everyone is fine and there has not been any destruction that I have heard of in Peace Corps sites. What I gathered from Spanish CNN today was that the worst destruction was in Port-au-Prince and to its South West, i.e. away from the Dominican Republic.
Last I heard, there were an estimated 100,000 deaths in Haiti. Having devastation so close to home, really makes you think, why not here, why not me? I feel like I have always read about monumental earthquakes on the other side of the world, but having one on the other side of the island is frightening. Especially with earthquakes, there is basically no warning or evacuation time. And of all countries, why Haiti? By UN standards, Haiti is the least developed country in the Americas, and it really needs all the help it can get. There is a huge illegal Diaspora of Haitians into the Dominican. They take very low-income labor-intensive jobs and live with out documentation robbing them of rights such as basic education after 5th grade. They are discriminated against and thought to be of a lower class because of where they are from. As may be true for many immigrants, they are constantly broken down and taught to be ashamed of where they are from, and now this? It just doesn’t seem fair. Granted aid is already on the way, but Haiti had enough on its plate before this disastrous destruction!
Haiti came from humble beginnings. It was the only nation who gained independence from a successful slave rebellion. It is also the first post-colonial black- led nation. Haiti has known the hardships of slavery and overcame them. Despite the adversity, I hope Haiti can rise again from this tragedy, but the road seems like a long one. Pray for Haiti and its people. Pray for inspiration for Haiti’s government and all international players that they will arrive to productive solutions.
If you would like to help out, here our two website where you could donate. www.MercyCorps.org or www.google.com/haitiearthquake. You could also try organizing donations in your communities, especially with water, food, and soap.
To conclude, remember to not take things always at face value. A wobble in your life could actually be devastation in another’s. A smile to a stranger, could change a person’s day.