Monday, December 10, 2007


This women litterally carried this baby chick in her shirt the whole week! We kept hearing a squeeking noise whenever we prayed, and then when we finally went to give her a hug at the end of the week, we asked her what it was (in fear that it may be a guinea pig out of her skirt) but she pulled this out!! ...she had bought it in the market and was just trying to keep it warm while it was a baby, so that it wouldn't die

Making a difference

At the Home Center in Andhaylas, Peru we had the opportunity to meet with 30 women each day. They were starving for not only food, but any piece of information that we had to help them live better lives. Of course we took this opportunity to share the gospel with these ladies, but since we had a nurse with us, we could help them with their hygiene as well. We had to begin with the basic tasks of washing your hands and brushing your teeth.


The nurse was then able to ask them if they had any questions about their health. Many complained of such sore backs from carrying their babies, so we showed them how to keep their shoulders back to have good posture!

Why are rural people poor in Peru?


Rural poverty has its roots in:

~High rates of illiteracy, particularly among women
~Lack of essential services such as education and electrical power
~Lack of secure property rights to land, forests and water
~Inadequate agricultural research, training and financial services
~Ineffective animal and plant health services
~Poor transport infrastructure and marketing systems
~Lack of well-defined territorial organization and planning
Source: IFAD

Rural Poverty in Peru



Poverty in Peru is deepest in remote rural areas. Millions of Peruvians – more than half the country’s people – struggle to survive, making out an existence below the poverty line. Close to one fourth of them live in extreme poverty.

Lack of opportunities for rural people have caused a massive migration to urban areas, where market activity offers poor people opportunities for survival. Three out of every four Peruvians live in urban areas. The majority of Peru’s poor people live in and around Lima, the capital.

People born in Lima can expect to live almost 20 years longer than people born in the southern highlands. Urban dwellers can earn 30 times as much as poor farmers. Although poverty affects both urban and rural people in Peru, the deepest poverty is rooted in rural areas, where it is a structural problem and where food insecurity is chronic in most communities.

Who are Peru’s rural poor people?

The poorest of the poor are indigenous peoples living in remote areas in the southern highlands. There, about 73 per cent of the indigenous Quechua and Aymara communities – more than 5 million people - live below the poverty line.

Rural women are the worst affected. The majority of rural women are poor, and nearly 70 per cent of them are extremely poor. Rural women play an important role in the subsistence economy. They work in agriculture and tend livestock, and they engage in income-generating activities. Women may represent as much as 80 per cent of a family’s labour force. Thanks to their productive activities, in addition to traditional household tasks and child care, women make it possible for their husbands to migrate in search of temporary work.

Where are Peru’s rural poor people?

Nearly nine out of ten rural poor people are in the arid Andean highlands, where they produce basic food crops at a subsistence level. Most are indigenous people.

http://www.ruralpovertyportal.org/english/regions/americas/per/index.htm

Women Affected by Poverty in Peru



Peru has some of the highest levels of poverty in Latin America, with more than half the population living below the poverty line. All over the world poverty affects women more than men. Addressing these inequalities by empowering women is the focus of Trόcaire's partner in Peru, Solidaridad para el Desarrollo (Solidarity for Development).
The Director of Solidaridad, Estela Cisneros, fights to promote women and improve their standard of living and human development in the shantytowns of Lima, the capital city. "We looked at some of the lives of these women and just couldn't stand by without doing something," she told Trócaire. "We examined what the women already knew and what they did best and worked with that." Machismo, the traditional pattern of male dominance in Peru, remains deeply ingrained in the culture. Women earn on average less than 46 per cent of what men earn and usually work in less secure occupations.
click here to learn more

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

An earthquake survivor rebuilds his home

An earthquake survivor rebuilds his home in Guadalupe,Ica, August 21, 2007.
Homeless victims of a devastating earthquake in Peru lined up for hours that Monday for blankets, food and water as President Alan Garcia struggled to solve a logistical nightmare in the disaster zone.

PHOTO: REUTERS/Enrique Castro-Mendivil ( PERU) http://imcworldwide.org/content/media/detail/1342/

Are You Willing?


To remind you, I left for Lima, Peru in the middle of July 07, and returned just 2 weeks prior to this Earthquake. So as this August 15th 8.0 magnitude earthquake struck the coast of Peru, south of Lima, this country was already still in my prayers. In Pisco, 80% of the city was destroyed and many other surrounding cities and villages suffered great loss as well.The disaster killed over 500 people and left tens of thousands homeless. In a vast disaster area surrounding the cities of Pisco and Ica, the survivors, many of them living on the streets, are now desperately waiting for help. More than 56,000 homes were destroyed and several powerful aftershocks…." IMCWORLDWIDE.ORG Tragically this earthquake happened on a Wednesday evening when a Catholic Church full of people were attending mass. The roof collapsed in and at least 200 people were buried under the rubble of the church. The people in these cities do not have home owners insurance, so rebuilding is very difficult. Food and water are huge needs that are leaving people desperate. Nights are cold, and many people are sleeping on the streets with only blankets.

Soo just in case you were wondering, I WILL BE GOING BACK to help :)
In searching for some of this information, I came across another female young adult's blog pertaining to her trip to Peru. She tells of her amazing experience in changing lives as she helps in the disaster relief from the Earthquake. Please check out all the stories from her blog, and for some beautiful pictures as well :)

Rachael's blog

Terremoto en el Peru - "No tenemos nada de comer"



"We do not have anything to eat"

For more pictures from this Earthquake go to this link: Terremoto en el Peru

Todos deben de colaborar



"All must collaborate"

Se abría la tierra, salía el agua



"The Earth was opened, left the water"

State of Emergency


President Garcia thanked God that the earthquake had not caused "a catastrophe with an immense number of victims".

In 1970, a 7.9-magnitude earthquake high in the Peruvian Andes triggered a landslide that buried the town of Yungay and killed 66,000 people.

"We have declared a state of emergency in Ica province and we are going this evening to ensure that regional and local governments, civil defence institutions and ministries can spend what they need to, rapidly and immediately," Mr Garcia said.

The president ordered police onto the streets of Lima to keep order, and schools are being closed because the buildings may be unsafe.

In Lima's poorer suburbs and shanty towns, news of the damage is still coming in, reports the BBC's Dan Collyns. However, he says the feeling in the city, where one third of the population lives, is that it may have narrowly avoided a major disaster.

Church Collapse

Deputy Health Minister Jose Calderon described the situation in the city of Ica, where 650,000 people live, as "dramatic". The National Institute for Civil Defence said 336 people had been killed in the province and 827 others injured. One person was killed in Lima.

Collapsed building in Canete

TV reports said 17 people were killed and dozens injured when the Senor de Luren church in Ica collapsed during evening mass. Callers to Radio Programas del Peru (RPP) said many homes in poor neighbourhoods in Ica and nearby Chincha had collapsed and that several cities had no electricity. The town of Pisco, 60km east of the epicentre, was also badly affected.

Hospitals are reported to be overwhelmed by the number of casualties. A cameraman for the Associated Press said the floors of the hospital in Chincha were covered with dead bodies.

The mayor of Ica, Mariano Nacimiento, said he had asked the government for medicine, blankets, tents and all help that could be given. The weather in the region is very cold at the moment.

Rescuers have struggled to reach Ica, however, as parts of the Pan-American Highway have been blocked by huge cracks in the tarmac and fallen power lines.

Unconfirmed reports said a bridge north of the city had collapsed.

Peru's 2007 Earthquake


A powerful 7.9 magnitude earthquake hit the coast of Peru, killing at least 337 people and injuring hundreds more, Peru's civil defense institute says. All but one of the deaths were in the coastal province of Ica, about 265km (165 miles) south of the capital, Lima. In Lima, buildings shook violently during the prolonged tremors, prompting residents to take to the streets.

The US Geological Survey said the epicentre was beneath the Pacific Ocean, about 145km (90 miles) south-east of Lima. Four strong aftershocks ranging from 5.4 to 5.9 followed, the organization said. Rush-hour traffic in Lima came to a halt as buildings shook with the force of the powerful tremors and hundreds of people spilled onto the streets.

"Usually you don't feel a tremor when outside, but the pavement was rippling, so I fled to the park where the ground continued to move under our feet," a resident of Lima, Bronwyn Davis, told the BBC News website.

"What was even more frightening was the roar of the quake coupled with the sky lighting up. It was surreal - if felt like we had stepped onto the set of some war movie."

Berenice, another resident, said the earthquake was the strongest she had ever felt.

"For some it seemed like the end of the world, and most people I know are still nervous," she said.

But the full devastating force of the earthquake was felt closer to the epicentre in the southern coastal province of Ica, where it brought down buildings, cut power supplies and disrupted communications.

Low-lying coastal areas in Peru, Chile, Ecuador and Colombia were evacuated after a tsunami alert was issued, but the warning was later withdrawn.


Source: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/6948888.stm


Facts about the Country of Peru

Peru is a country in western South America. It is bordered on the north by Ecuador and Colombia, on the east by Brazil, on the southeast by Bolivia, on the south by Chile, and on the west by the Pacific Ocean.

Peruvian territory was home to the Norte Chico civilization, one of the oldest in the world, and to the Inca Empire, the largest state in Pre-Columbian America. The Spanish Empire conquered the country in the 16th century and established a Viceroyalty, which included most of its South American colonies. After achieving independence in 1821, Peru has undergone periods of political unrest and fiscal crisis as well as periods of stability and economic upswing.


Peru is a presidential representative democratic republic divided into 25 regions. Its geography varies from the arid plains of the Pacific coast to the peaks of the Andes mountains and the tropical forests of the Amazon Basin. It is a developing country with a medium Human Development Index score and a poverty level around 50%. Its main economic activities include agriculture, fishing, mining, and manufacturing of products such as textiles.


The Peruvian population, estimated at 28 million. The main spoken language is Spanish, although a significant number of Peruvians speak Quechua and other native languages. This mixture of cultural traditions has resulted in a wide diversity of expressions in fields such as art, cuisine, literature, and music.

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Tuesday, November 6, 2007

Friends of Peru

In going down to Peru, we were connected to a woman's organization entitled 'Friends of Peru'. I met Gianina through my home church, as she has been very outspoken about her passion for this ministry through her own experience growing up in Peru.
Friends of Peru is devoted to improving the lives of the most impoverished families of Peru by providing a strong faith based education program that enables them to change their world.
Their purpose is to outreach and provide the resources necessary so that children and their families can achieve their full potential by promoting academic preparedness, leadership development, self-sufficiency, self-esteem, and the teaching the word of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.
Among their programs of family crisis counseling, education, skills training, business guidance and assistance, and spiritual mentorship, we were able to contribute both to training in hygiene and spiritual mentorship. The Friends of Peru website elaborates on this, as one can seek out opportunities to help. Friends of Peru

Missions Trip 2 Peru


This past summer I traveled to Peru on my own, with quite a smaller group of people. I wish that I would have had more internet access, because I think that blogging would have been a great way to keep friends updated on my trip back home, since we ran into many complications along the way pertaining to both sicknesses and governmental complications to name a few. With many great stories of our experiences in traveling and seeing God's glory time and time again I would have been able to quickly jot them down online rather than try to remember them when I was home and just had quick 5minute catch-ups with people about my trip.

Traveling



Many blogs pertain to a person's personal experiences in life. They are a great way to display your thoughts and feelings about a recent event or lesson learned in life.

My first experience with blogging was when I studied abroad in Europe for a semester and found that blogging, over email, allowed us to tell friends and family back home what we were up to in a quick and fun way. Our Europe Term's blog was: www.xanga.com/bethelu