Saturday, February 16, 2013

Carnival...


February 10th-12th we joined Ecuador in celebrating Carnival, a holiday preceding Ash Wednesday. It is basically a country wide water fight. Using little squirt guns, water balloons, and absolutely any container that can hold water along with powdered paints and foam spray cans we “played” carnival together for 3 straight days. Although by Wednesday my whole body ached and I was left pretty sun burnt, these were three of the most exhilarating days yet in Ecuador. We traveled together around Mt Sinai to play with some of our closest neighbors, went to our afterschool program to battle the little kids, and even played right outside of our church with the youth group. I couldn´t stop thinking, I cannot believe that I get work off right now to play in this water war!

Thanks to Miguel´s waterproof case, below are some photos to help you picture what this holiday was like. But again, even the pictures cannot do justice to the holiday!

The beginning...Sunday afternoon



Walking Sinai to play Carnival




Teaming up!

A little break for banana bread to celebrate Monica´s birthday

Getting painted at the afterschool program

Chasing María Jose

María Jose´s revenge...


Picture with some of the afterschool program kids

Playing outside the church with youth group

Some of the youth group kids




Making the rounds in our neighborhood all day Tuesday...


Getting body slammed by Christina...and crashing their pool party




Still surprised by the buckets of water on Day 3

Teaming up against Greg

My accomplice...


FREEZING at the end of Day 3

The end of Carnival


Friday, February 8, 2013

Mi cumpleaños…

“The easy smile of the poor and their readiness to celebrate have a basis in reality. While they show us that life is more cruel and evil, more tenacious than we ordinarily admit, they also help us recognize that there is something going on in the world that is much more wonderful than we had imagined” – Dean Brackley

I may have posted this quotation before – this time I focus on the phrase “readiness to celebrate.” I had an active and wonderful birthday – never have I felt such consistent and overwhelming love throughout the course of an entire day.

Random neighbors in the streets yelled “feliz cumpleaños” and “viva la cumpleñera” as I walked by. Once it hit noon, I literally ate my way through Mt Sinai - I had three full meals that afternoon along with four cakes. Love and hospitality was most readily spread in breaking bread with my neighbors in celebration. That night my communitymate Greg made my favorite meal from home for dinner. It was such a thoughtful and kind surprise – after eating all of my favorite Ecua dishes with friends who have become like family here in Mt Sinai, in was SO nice to share my favorite dish of my own family with my community.

I was surprised, overwhelmed, and humbled by the outpouring of love. I kept thinking as I walked from home to home, ‘I am truly blessed.’

Thank you to all my friends and family at home for the birthday cards, emails, calls, and prayers – I am so grateful!

A few pictures of the cakes I ate…





Wednesday, January 30, 2013

January flew by...

Rostro Vols at our 6-month retreat
Hi friends!

I apologize for the break from blogging – January was an eventful month! First off – it is the start of “retreat group season” here in Mount Sinai. We had two wonderful college groups staying with us this month, Villanova University and Manhattan College. The normal routine we have gotten accustomed to in these past 6 months was disrupted a bit as most of our free time was spent with the group translating, touring our worksites, cooking, and just chatting about our lives. While I am still waiting to lead my own group, it was nice to share my life here in Mount Sinai and the relationships with our neighbors with these groups. It was refreshing and regrounded me to walk the streets of Sinai in their shoes and witness things I have become so accustomed to with new eyes. Walking with the groups reminded me of a passage of Dean Brackely describing those who visit El Salvador for the first time, and probably a similar feeling I had my first month in Ecuador:

“The visitors feel themselves losing their grip; or better, they feel the world losing its grip on them. What world? The world made up of important people like them and unimportant poor people like their hosts. As the poet Yeats says, “things fall apart;” the visitors’ world is coming unhinged. They feel resistance, naturally, to a current that threatens to sweep them out of control.

They feel a little confused–again–like the disorientation of falling in love. In fact, that is what is happening, a kind of falling in love. The earth trembles. My horizon is opening up. I’m on unfamiliar ground, entering a richer, more real world. We all live a bit on the periphery of the deep drama of life, more so, on average, in affluent societies. The reality of the periphery is thin, one-dimensional, “lite,” compared to the multilayered richness of this new world the visitors are entering. In this interchange with a few of their representatives, the anonymous masses of the world’s poor emerge from their cardboard-cutout reality and take on the three-dimensional status of full-fledged human beings.”

At Hogar de Cristo this month I continued forward on my project on microenterprises in Mount Sinai. In 2013, one of the initiatives of my office is to collaborate with the Microcredit office of Hogar de Cristo and make their services more widely known and available. No research has been done on small businesses in Mount Sinai, and therefore I am researching the process of starting a business, the obstacles, the benefits (financial, health, and educational), and more. This month I finished walking and mapping all of Mount Sinai for the small businesses. There are over 200, and this is not even including the countless women running businesses out of their own homes that I will soon interview. I´m uncertain, but definitely excited to see where this project goes and what I uncover.

This past weekend the Rostro Volunteers hit the beach for our 6-month volunteer retreat. It was a necessary and refreshing break for rest and reflection. We relaxed on the beach, went running in the rain, and ate some great food we cannot easily make at home, like strawberry pancakes, peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, and baked ziti. Even more than the necessary physical rest, our retreat leader, Jimmy, provided many great sessions to help unpack our first 6 months in Ecuador in preparation for our upcoming 6 months.

During the retreat I continued to reread and finished one of the books I brought from home entitled, The Call to Discernment in Troubled Times by Dean Brackley. Being the nerd that I am, I sat on the beach underlining and marking up my copy. Flipping back through the book now, two quotations I feel really summarize my reflections on spirituality in Ecuador:

“In Latin America, the poor speak of Diosito, our “little God.” They speak of Jesusito and Papà Dios. Diminutives ad terms of endearment express belief in a God who draws near, understands, forgives – a “little God,” little like them, for whom the world shows contempt. This is the Deus menor, the lesser God. Because God walks among us and shares our sufferings…”

“Grieving over the crosses of the world gathers our fragmented selves, centers and heals us. When we share the sorrow of the crucified of the earth, we are no longer alone. This, too, is part of our vocation. We were made to share each other´s burdens”

In these first six months I have witnessed the enduring faith of my neighbors who believe in a God of accompaniment; a God who desires to walk right beside them through the mud of Sinai, the insults of the rich, and the suffering of financial burdens and broken families.  They are grounded in this intimate relationship with God and are unified in this shared sorrow. While prayer and time for reflection can be hard to incorporate in my day (outside of retreat weekends) my daily life and interactions with my neighbors has served as a form of prayer.

Below are a couple pictures from January:
Participating in a concert at the church to celebrate the 5 year anniversary of the  parish!

Amy´s First Birthday party!


Love and miss you all,
Colleen

Thursday, January 3, 2013

Merry Christmas!


A belated Merry Christmas to you all! I hope you had a happy and healthy holiday.

We had a hectic, but AMAZING month of December here in Mount Sinai. To give you an idea of what a month it has been, I’ll give you the rundown of a typical day the week before Christmas…I found myself wearing running shoes and running to some places as I was always late for something (I guess I am finally adjusting to “Ecua time”).

6:45am – Running to a neighbor’s home, late already because my alarm didn’t go off
7am – Running with my neighbor’s family to catch the bus to the school Christmas party
7:30am – After being introduced to everyone as the “gringita” friend of the family, I down an overflowing plate of arroz con pollo
8:10am – Running again to catch a bus to Hogar de Cristo to participate in a mass for all the employees and volunteers (that started at 8…)
10am-1pm – Working on my personal project at Hogar de Cristo on microenterprises in Mount Sinai. I’m in phase one…walking and mapping all of Mount Sinai to classify the small businesses
1-2pm – Lunch at a neighbor’s house
2-5:30 – Christmas party at our afterschool program
6-10pm – Posada at our church (I´ll explain this below)
10:30pm – Cooking dinner together as a community and exhaustion finally hits!

At our first Posada
We celebrated las posadas at our three chapels the nine days before Christmas. Each church had it´s own unique feel. At San Felipe each night a lot of the students of the school and our immediate neighbors gathered to sing Christmas songs and explore the meaning of the holiday and Jesus´ birth. Corpus Christi and Santa Teresa had a different set up. We all met at the church together and from there walked to a neighboring home. Different people each night dressed up as Mary and Joseph and we walked singing carols with just one candle imitating their search for shelter. Once at the home, we sang back and forth a posada song with the owners of the home, asking to be let in as Mary is carrying the son of God. Once inside we either had a talk, a prayer, or prayed the rosary before sharing in a meal or snack together. Las posadas were a unique and different way for me to celebrate Christmas, and it allowed me to reflect on the actual experience of Mary and Joseph and how I may prepare to welcome Christ into my own home and life.


In order to get into the Christmas spirit, and celebrate Christmas in a familiar way I shared my family’s tradition of cookie baking/decorating. I baked with my community, at our after school program’s Christmas party, and with my neighbors. It was nice to share a piece of my own life with our neighbors. The children at the afterschool program were especially cute…some thought their cookies were too beautiful to eat!

Dressed up for Christmas party at Refuerzo
On the 23rd we had a Christmas party for all of our guards and their families. We cooked for about 50 people and then provided the entertainment for the night, a Rostro tradition. We decided to change the lyrics to some popular American and Spanish Christmas songs to rhyme with our experience here in Ecuador. We changed Mariah Carey´s “All I Want for Christmas is You” to all of the things we are missing from home…like food, chocolate, snow etc. The song Silent Night is Noche de Paz (Night of Peace) in Ecuador which we changed to Noche sin Paz (Night without sleep). We joked about all the noises of Mount Sinai that keep us awake at night (roosters, dogs, and water trucks etc.)



Christmas eve we spent the entire day in our community Christmas caroling and handing out our Christmas cards to all of our beloved neighbors (above). Miguel brought along his guitar and we did our best to sing carols in English and Spanish. The smiles and happiness each family showed, and even the tears some mothers shed, at our presence and our honest attempts to sing was overwhelming. It was also quite humorous trying to explain to each neighbor that there is just one sweater and with the “magic” of the computer we created this photo. After about 7 hours of caroling and a delicious lunch break at our guard´s house with his family, we went to three masses back to back to back at each of our three chapels. Again, there was such life and light celebrating with these 3 communities. While we were definitely a little loopy returning home past midnight to finally cook dinner, we were definitely filled with life and energy from an amazing day.

Christmas day in Sinai!
Christmas day was HOT (definitely in the 90´s!) but relaxing. The Arbolito volunteers came over to Mount Sinai and we cooked together all day. Everybody played some part in the meal we shared in together.

Christmas night laying in bed and finally taking a breath after a busy month I reflected on the end of advent. At the beginning of the advent season during one of our spirituality nights we proposed the question “how are we preparing to welcome Christ into our lives?”. While I lamented the fact that I did not have the time to intentionally pray on this question very much, I think I witnessed the answer in the warm hugs and smiles that welcomed us at each home we caroled at. I lived the answer through the example of hospitality and open arms my neighbors have shown in welcoming me into their lives in this year.

December 27th through January 1st my family visited Ecuador. We spent two days in Cuenca, a historic city about 3 hours from Monte Sinai, and the rest of the time meeting my worksites, community, and neighbors. Below are a few pictures to highlight our time in Cuenca.







New Years Eve was spent here in Mount Sinai with my community. Ecuador has a tradition of burning “año viejos”, paper mache dolls filled with fire works and doused with gasoline. The whole sky lit up with random fireworks in every direction. A picture can in no way do justice to the experience, but below are a few pictures of us burning our año Viejo, Yogi Bear in an old Rostro polo.

With our guards and año viejo
Our street at midnight


Happy New Years friends! Feliz año!
Colleen

Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Reflections on 5 months...



Ecuador has taught me a lot in 5 months. Things I never imagined and in ways I never could have envisioned. It’s impossible to share all that has run through my head or made its way into my journal, but I would like to share a few of the reflections I’ve drawn (and a few quotations from books I’ve read here in Ecuador).  

“Ministry is entering with our human brokenness into communion with others and speaking a word of hope. This hope is not based on my power to solve the problems of those with whom we live, but on the love of God, which becomes visible when we let go of our fears of being out of control and enter into his presence in a shared confession of weakness” – Gracias by Henri Nouwen

I feel I am constantly being humbled and affirmed during my time in Ecuador. A few weeks ago I had another eye-opening experience. I visited one of my close neighbors while she and her daughters were doing pedicures. She beckoned me in and filled a tub of water to wash my feet in before painting my toe nails. I had this odd, sudden pang of shame – hesitating to take my sandals off and reveal my dirty feet covered in dust and grime from walking the streets of Mt Sinai all day. This moment reminded me of the concluding prayer session of our senior MAGIS retreat (a church leadership program at Holy Cross) where we did a foot washing ritual. It was harder to be the person having one’s feet washed than to be the person doing the actual washing. The same held true in this moment, and by extension how I felt at that moment about my time and “service” in Ecuador. It is relatively easier to sit with somebody else in their own vulnerability – to attend to another’s wounds. But to expose one’s own weakest, unkempt part (the foot in this analogy of the body) is not quite as easy. It is important to learn to be comfortable in both roles – as the washer and the “washee”. In this year in Ecuador I have constantly been humbled and invited to bear my own “dirty feet” and sit in solidarity with others bearing their own “dirty feet,” without shame or doubt, in “a shared confession of weakness”.

“It is difficult not to have plans, not to organize people around an urgent cause, and not to feel that you are working directly for social progress. But I wonder more and more if the first thing shouldn’t be to know people by name, to eat and drink with them, to listen to their stories and tell your own, and to let them know with words, handshakes, and hugs that you do not simply like them, but truly love them” – Gracias by Henri Nouwen

The mission statement of Rostro de Cristo focuses on a mission of presence – not of doing but of being. I have gained a new appreciation for the ministry of pure presence in this year. I have had two deep and moving conversations with neighbors where they said never, never did they expect to ever host a “gringita” (term for American) in their home. It was again, such a humbling moment for me. It didn’t matter what we did together in my visit or what we talked about. Just my willingness and actual desire to enter her home, to sit in her own space, and open myself and receive her was enough – enough to move her to tears. All that any person needs or desires is to be recognized, to have his/her own humanity dignity recognized and affirmed. As I believe Mother Teresa once said, ‘our greatest fallacy is that we forget that we belong to each other.’

“To find oneself alone in a great city, without a single friend or acquaintance, without provision of any kind, whether it be physical equipment or the support and security one derives from ordinary human relationships; to be poor even as far as language is concerned, unable to express oneself, to tell people what one is, what one knows; always to be in a position of inferiority, a child just learning to speak, contemptuously dismissed in every discussion, painfully aware of the poor impression one is always making, and of the pity, or else the hostility, with which one is regarded – all this brings home to a person better than empty theorizing what poverty, in the radical sense of dis-possesion, really means. Not only does it take away external attachments, it makes one truly humble of heart; for to be poor is to be humiliated, and it is from humiliations that one learns humility” – Essential Writings of Pedro Arrupe

Throughout my time here, and in my doubts and the struggles of the first few months to learn the language, I have questioned how my lack of fluency has affected my experience. How would my experience change if I did understand everything, if I could converse without even thinking? While at times I definitely beat myself up for not knowing the language perfectly, it has come with its own unique gifts in this year. Sure, there are questions that go unasked or stories that I don’t fully understand. But does that go against my mission here as a volunteer? I don’t believe so.

A few months ago I sat on rice bags in between two homes hiding from the brutal sun with a neighbor as she recounted her life growing up in and raising children and grandchildren in poverty to me. Mid-way through I thought to myself what a shame it was I didn’t understand everything perfectly, and what a disservice to her this was. But upon leaving and hearing her barrage of gratitude for my visit I realized it didn’t matter. She just needed somebody to recognize she was there – hidden between the two homes – present and suffering. She just needed an ear willing to sit and listen to her thoughts, all that occupies her all day.
Similarly, the first couple months working at Ana’s after school program I left most weeks feeling useless and incompetent without the proper vocabulary to effectively teach or discipline the kids. What a humbling experience it has been to be greeted every single week with warm hugs and flowers picked from nearby trees and again upon leaving. We are loved here for who we are, not necessarily for what we do. Humility and gratitude are two of the biggest graces I have learned from the example of my neighbors. These are lessons I could not have learned without silence and idleness.

Last week as a neighbor and I were shaking with laughter she told me, “you have to laugh at the world before the world laughs at you.” This quotation brought to mind a presentation given by Fr. Jim Martin during our orientation back in July entitled Laughing with the Saints. In part of his presentation he presented the case for what a tool humor is: humor evangelizes; humor as a tool of humility; humor welcomes; humor heals; humor deepens our relationship with God. Then when I think of my time spent visiting neighbors I think of how much of that is spent laughing – A LOT. We laugh at my terrible dance moves, our bloopers of Spanish mistakes, and random events of our lives (me getting chased and nibbled on by our new puppy was popular!). I believe it is through sharing our humor and laughing at the world that we also share our authentic selves.

“The easy smile of the poor and their readiness to celebrate have a basis in reality. While they show us that life is more cruel and evil more tenacious than we ordinarily admit, they also help us recognize that there is something going on in the world that is much more wonderful that we had imagined” – A Call to Discernment in Troubled Times by Dean Brackley

I can in no way neatly conclude all of Ecuador or these 5 months into one post. All that I can conclude is that Ecuador is abundant – it is sadness and its joy – both felt with every fiber of your being. Every single day is a unique adventure.

Love and miss you all,
Colleen

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Quito and other photo updates

Hi Friends!

This past weekend 9 Rostro volunteers headed north to Quito for the weekend. We are so busy and involved here in Mt Sinai, that at times it is easy to forget that we live in one city of a very diverse country. We stayed at the Working Boys Center in Quito as a few Rostro vols have friends volunteering there. Their hospitality was outstanding as they shared their home, their city, and their reflections on their time working in Quito. It was a unique and wonderful experience to share about our time in Mt Sinai with volunteers serving in different capacities and with different poplulations. While I LOVED my weekend in Quito (especially the beautiful mountains that encapsulate the city!), I left affirmed that I am exactly where I want and need to be here in Mt. Sinai. Below are some pictures to highlight the trip:

In front of La Basilica

On our way to the top of la Basilica
View of Quito from top of Basilica
View from the top 2
Iglesia de San Franciso
Climbing Mt Pichincha
Mt Pichincha
View of Quito from Mt Pichincha
With the the Madres, Padre, and a few volunteers of the Working Boys Foundation

Life in Mount Sinai has remained busy and eventful these past few weeks as we approach Christmas. Here are a few pictures that summarize it:

Happy Thanksgiving!
Neighborhood time - the girls made me over into a princess
Elias´birthday party
My community night...Christmas cookies and decorating the house
Open house at San Felipe Neri School - my little friend did a presentation on fruits native to Ecuador
Love and miss you all,
Colleen