hi everyone here is Project that needs our help, the landscape around the
school has ben designed
by Bill Roley and put in with the help of Permaculture folks, I am going
down to help on Sat Jan 19, hope to see some of you there
wes
roe santa barbara permaculture network
http://www.americasfoundation.net/
For more details, e-mail: C2E2BRADY@aol.com We also maintain an e-mail
mailing list for alerts before
events (like Volunteer Work Days). E-mail Christine to receive these
alerts.
The Next Volunteer Workdays are:
Saturday, January 19, 2002
Saturday, February 16, 2002
Saturday, March 16, 2002
All Volunteer Work Days are at Colonia La Esperanza. Join James Hubbell
and other volunteers as they
continue to work on the dream of building an inspirational learning
environment for the residents of Colonia
La Esperanza (see also Architecture and Volunteering). We meet at the
parking area of the H street Trolley
in Chula Vista, CA at 8:30 a.m. on the Saturday listed. Look for Jim's
white mini van. Expect to arrive in the
Colonia around 9:30 a.m., work until 3:00 p.m. and be back in Chula Vista
around 4:00 p.m. In general, it's
helpful if you bring work gloves, a straw hat and/or any general tools,
like a drill, hammer or sander. We
take a lunch break from 12:00 to 1:00 p.m. Bring your own lunch.
Beginners and professionals are
welcome. You can bring your kids! If you try to find the schools on your
own ask a Taxi cab driver to direct
you to Colonia La Esperanza in the Subdelegacion Sanchez Taboada of La
Mesa, Tijuana. The telephone
from inside Tijuana is 626-46-98 or 660-31-94.
Tijuana is an unusual place. Not even 15 miles from one
of the richest cities of the world lies the third largest of
Mexico's cities (at least 3 million people, even though
nobody knows for sure). Colonia Esperanza is one of the
poorest neighbourhoods in Tijuana - many houses are
without water, electricity, and sewage systems, many
family dwellings are subject to the whims of the
environment, and the structures do not hold up well in
heavy rain and/or earthquakes. The streets in many
colonias are not paved.
In this environment many children grow up without the
basic education that could enable them to change their
situation, and ultimately build a new environment for their
children.
Education empowers. We are working to create
schools
high in expectations and rich in beauty, with the belief that
our students will transcend the bounds of poverty and
become self-reliant, engaged, and inspired leaders of the
future.
We operate two schools located six miles south of the
U.S. border in Tijuana, Mexico, the "Jardin de Ninos La
Esperanza" and "Colegio La Esperanza". The schools,
aptly named "the Children's Garden of Hope" and "the
School of Hope", provide 250 disadvantaged children
complete educational instruction through the sixth grade.
The Americas Foundation believes that many of the
children touched by the spirit of our endeavor will return to
their Colonias and change the environment forever. We
offer financial assistance to individuals for medical or legal
emergencies, and direct aid to the Colonia in times of
extreme hardship. We also provide academic scholarships
to students who graduate from Colonia Esperanza schools
and wish to continue their education.
Each person's voice should be heard. In
addition to
building and operating schools, a natural outgrowth of this
project has been to guide and support residents of the
Colonia who organize to further common causes that affirm
basic human rights.
The people of the Colonia have
successfully lobbied
their government to build more schools. In addition, they
have hastened the installation of public utilities, a sewer
system, telephone lines and paved roads, and have
secured local political representation for the future growth
of their community.