The peace corps panama director recently sent out an email to all peace corps panama volunteers announcing an essay contest. Three volunteers will win a hardy handshake from the country director and most importantly an extra vacation day! All we have to do is write a one page entry on a day in the life of a volunteer. My competition most likely are the teaching English volunteers as most of them have bachelors degrees in English Literature. Vacation days are a big deal in Peace Corps because we only get Panamanian holidays off. Which is pretty annoying because our communities and schools expect us to celebrate with them on holidays and not to take off to visit Kuna Yala. Ergo on Panamanian holidays Peace Corps volunteers are usually dancing alongside our community members instead of visiting one of Panama's plethora of vacation destinations. So I am entering this contest with one goal: to win an extra vacation day.
A day in the life of a volunteer. I woke up this morning at 6 am with "bachata" blasting out my window. My neighbors can't seem to get enough of Prince Royce's Spanglish version of "stand by me".I have a meeting at the municipal government's office this morning. I have recently started working in the city and I would like to share a brief presentation with representatives from the Municipal government, they are after all supposed to be one of my agency counterparts. The meeting is scheduled for 10 am. I have time to go to the copy center to print out a copy of my PowerPoint and print out business cards. I got to the municipal governments meeting room fifteen minutes early. Chitre residents pour into the building along with their agency counterparts. Secretaries walk from office to office. The president of the meeting has already arrived along with representative Via Real. It's 10:15 and the three other representatives, Gonzalez, Vergara, and Cedeno have yet to arrive. In Panama being late is the norm, Panamanians have even coined the term, "hora panamena," the 'Panamanian hour.' Regardless of how long I have been working here, the Panamanian hour is still frustrating. 5 minutes is okay. 15 your starting to push it. And thirty minutes later, walking in on the phone is unacceptable, especially for a governmental agency. But Panamanians seem to have so much more patience then I do. At 10:35 all of the representatives have arrived and the meeting begins. The meeting set up is incredibly formal. All of the representatives sit in a horse shoe shape formation, all are behind microphones, all with individual desks and fancy office chairs. The meeting begins will several formalities, "honorable representative Gonzalez? Present. Honorable representative Via Real? Present. Honorable president of the Advisory Committee? Present." The first resident of Chitre to share her project proposal with the committee is Francisca Quintero about a local cooperative in need of land to build their business. Her speech is long and heartfelt and also in Panamanian style full of brown nosing. She knows what she is doing. The committee passes a motion to approve the cooperatives project. The meeting continues with a letter from the mayor who was detained for the day with work in Panama City. More letters are read and approved. The representatives share projects from their districts, they argue, speak candidly, yell, laugh, and continue to do so for 2 hours. Finally the meeting is opened up to the public. At this point they realize that I wasn't included in the agenda. But there's a meeting next Wednesday, all I have to do is solicit time to speak. I have to write a formal letter to the president of the advisory council and next week they will let me know if I can speak during the meeting. Today I had a PowerPoint prepared, I had printed out pictures of the open dump, I had a letter of solicitation for 600.00 dollars from the municipal government to help fund my recycling pilot project. And in today's meeting they allowed me enough time to share my name before everyone stood up to leave. My next chance to speak may be the 11th or the 18th. I might wait for three hours yet again just to share my name, but I will be there trying to share my project. I left the municipal governments office today somewhat defeated. I went home ate chips and salsa with a Dr. Pepper and wrote out the solicitation letter formally asking to be part of the meetings agenda next week. I walked to the Internet cafe to print it out and walked to the office only to find that they had closed early today. So I walked over to the mayors office and set up a meeting directly with him for tomorrow afternoon. His approval for the 600 dollars may be all I need?
Hopefully I'll have better luck tomorrow. I will take the solicitation letter tomorrow and hope for a time slot in next weeks meeting.
One bright spot today: I got on the bus today and sat down next to a very cute old man. He told me as I sat down, "good afternoon my love," to which I naturally replied, 'good afternoon my heaven." He asked me where I was from and noticed my peace corps lanyard. He then told me about a volunteer that he had worked with in the 1970s. He told me that this volunteer had come back several times and is already old with grand kids. I was grateful to run into someone with such a positive opinion of peace corps on a day like today.
This was my experience today. I am currently enjoying an air conditioned cafe and three sweet pineapple empanadas. This evening I have an 'insanity' workout class at the gym I joined last week.
Thanks for reading,
Sonia
Sent from my iPad
Wednesday, September 4, 2013
Monday, August 26, 2013
Peace Corps Response: My New Job!
Hello blog readers,
I was recently on a radio show here in Panama known as the
Breakfast Show with Gerry D and Sandra Snyder and I happened to share this blog
address on the air.
http://www.pbcpanama.com/index.php/this-week/friday
The full show will only be available until this Friday, August 30th
on their website.
For those of you that
were interested enough in Peace Corps Panama to find this address, welcome—I am
glad that I could spark some interest in volunteer work in Panama and with the
Peace Corps. To family and friends that continue to read this blog I need to
share my current undertaking with you… I
have recently started a new Peace Corps adventure. I am still working with waste management and
Recycling in Panama, although I am starting in a new area of the country. I am currently serving as a Peace Corps
Response volunteer in Chitre, Herrera, which is 4 hours southwest of Panama
City. My position is “Response Recycling
Coordinator.” Which means that I will be working with the municipal government
and the ministry of education in a recycling pilot project to create recycling
programs in 5 local schools. I am also
hoping to work with an environmental group at the local university to educate
15 university students how to teach about waste management and recycling so
that they can reach local schools as well. I have signed on until February, but
that date can change depending on how much work needs to be done.
I just got back to Panama last Monday and today was my first day
in Chitre “on the job.” Peace Corps Response is a very interesting experience
in that it is very independent. I couldn’t imagine a job being more independent
than my work during my Peace Corps service, but it seems to be much more
independent. During my service, I was
assigned to a community, three host families, and to work-counterparts. Here in Chitre, coordinating meetings,
finding agencies, etc. is all on me. It’s a bit intimidating, hopefully I can meet
up with some other volunteers this week so they can help 'show me the ropes."
Today I was able to visit Chitre’s open dump and it’s a
disaster. The “Landfill” is full of
vultures, no lining for leachate, and no sign of improvement. I actually visited the site with the director
of municipal services and he has been working with this site for the last five
years. Under normal circumstances,
Municipal waste collection is directly correlated with a countries income. In
high-income countries, 10 percent of the municipal resources are spent in waste
collection and 80-90 percent of resources are spent with waste management
treatment. In low-income countries, it’s the opposite, with the great majority
of resources spent on waste collection and very little spent on waste management
treatment. The situation in Chitre is
bad, but the city’s dump doesn’t stand-alone; cities all over Panama including
Panama City are facing the same environmental issues. Panama City’s open dump,
Cerro Patacon has caught fire several times, most recently in the last 5
months. The government’s reaction
however is very hush-hush. No one wants to admit that waste management is a
nightmare in Panama. Immediately after the fire began in March 2013, the
Ministry of Health said that the air was very toxic. Although later that same
day the Ministry of Health retracted their previous statements and said very
little contamination would come from the fire.
Initially they were saying that the surrounding neighborhood of San
Miguelito should be evacuated and then they only recommended evacuation for
those with “compromised lungs.” Once the fire was under control, the government
proceeded to give medals and honors to those that fought the “unpredictable
blaze.” Cerro Patacon’s fire however was and will continue to be a time bomb
that the government will have to find a solution to. The same is true for
Chitre, currently though none of the representatives want to admit to the
problem let alone contribute to its solution. Vamos a ver que pasara aca en
Chitre. I have included photos of the open dump here in Chitre below:
I would also like to share about my boyfriend, Nate Arnold’s
Latrine and Reforestation project. Nate for some reason does not want to ask
friends, family, or family friends for help funding his Peace Corps Partnership
Program Grant. He is hoping to get all 7,000 dollars funded from donors that
are inspired to donate. Which is amazing and an impressive attempt to get his
project funded, but I am not sure that it will work. For funding for projects
of my own during my service I was emailing everyone that I knew through email,
phone calls, facebook, and this blog. It isn’t to say that Nate won’t get his
grant completely funded the way that he is choosing to do it, he probably can.
I just think that if he used social media—more people would be aware of his
project and more people would donate. He is currently trying to fund a daunting
7,000 dollars. Which in Panama seems like so much money, whereas in the states
7,000 dollars seems very possible.
So I am going to include the link to the Peace Corps
donation page here to try and help Nate out: https://donate.peacecorps.gov/index.cfm?shell=donate.contribute.projDetail&projdesc=13-525-029
The Peace Corps is an incredible organization and I am proud
to serve again as a Peace Corps Response volunteer here in Panama. The Peace
Corps can be a challenge in that we are expected to do a lot with very little
financial resources. The Peace Corps is
made up of human resources that identify problems in their community in health,
agriculture, or the environment and dare to improve the conditions working “arm
in arm” with community members. The amount of work that Nate is attempting to
do will help 43 homes and 285 individuals, which is about 90 percent of the community.
For 100 dollars you can help provide a latrine to a family. I hope several
people are convinced to do so. I have included a photo of Nate and I, to help put a face to the name.
Hasta la proxima,
Sonia
Wednesday, May 29, 2013
Gender and Development Camp, Peace Corps Panama at its best
file://localhost/Users/soniaesquibel/Desktop/Seminario%20Juventil.mov
If not, its on YouTube at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m1-HbZ2BKAA, youtube name: Seminario Juventil
I hope you are able to watch the slide show above. If not I am also uploading it to youtube as well. Pictures are worth a thousand words, but I still need to share my initial reactions to the project that I just carried out.
To all that donated to the project, Thank you. I wish you all could have been there to see it with your own eyes. It was truly the ultimate "feel good" experience. We were offering these students an experience that they had never had before. Every Panamanian agency kept saying how rare and unique it was and that they should aprovecharlo, take advantage of it and enjoy it to the fullest. And I genuinely feel that the youth did take advantage of this experience and that they all had an amazing time. Our last night one of the most participatory students shared that she hated "despedidas (goodbyes)" and i apologized and told her unfortunately that's what we had planned for the evening.
In total we had 31 Panamanian Youth attend camp and we had the help of 12 phenomenal Peace Corps Volunteers--Beth, Tali, Danielle, Amber, Kendra, Ruth, Chelsea, Alex, Nick, Andrew, and Whitney. Without these volunteers, the camp wouldn't have been possible. All of these volunteers went above and beyond.
Thank you to all of the donors! Muchisimas gracias! More to come!
Saturday, April 13, 2013
Be the Change
The Ask: Soliciting funding for a Youth Leadership Camp this
May 24-May 28th 2013
Peace Corps is an exercise in Patience and Perseverance. We
come in with all of these expectations, especially me. Several people have told
me that I need to lower my expectations. I need to become less of an optimist
and more of a realistic optimist. I feel like I am beginning to understand
that, especially with my last project as a Peace Corps volunteer.
I am trying to host a youth camp for 40 kids; I have
mentioned this in previous blogs. I never could have imagined though how much
work needs to go into this. I have to coordinate with other volunteers to make
sure that their youth are still interested. I need to coordinate with
Panamanian agencies for lectures and resources. And I need to fundraise both
within country and back home to host the camp.
I believe all of this work is worth the effort. These 40
kids will be facing a lot in the next few years. They will be facing challenges
that are in many regards cultural issues. Just in the province that I work in,
50 percent of new mothers are ages 17-21.
The poverty rate in panama is 36.8 percent, which means 4 out off every
10 Panamanians are living in poverty. And 54 percent of Panamanian children
below 6 years of age are living in poverty. These youth face teenage pregnancy
and poverty problems. This camp is Peace Corps Panama’s attempt to modify and
empower these youth to become active participants in their futures by
establishing goals and values. We want them to be well versed in family
planning, sexual health, decision-making, self-esteem, and becoming leaders in
their own communities.
I believe in these kids and I really believe that they will
learn so much at the camp if they attend.
If you can help I would really appreciate it. I have
received so much positive feedback from the US and Panama already that I really
feel that we can do this!!
The donation page can be found at www.peacecorps.gov then click on donate to
volunteer projects. The project is listed under Panama Peace Corps volunteer
Chelsea Mackin’s name and is called “Gender and Development Youth camp.”
The following link works too: https://donate.peacecorps.gov/index.cfm?shell=donate.contribute.projDetail&projdesc=13-525-015
Thank you from the bottom of my heart. The positive feedback
has made me cry several times, I have been so touched by everyone that has been
compelled to donate! But lets keep it
coming!!!!
Sonia Esquibel
Crazy Stubborn Peace Corps Volunteer
Panama 2011-2013
I also wanted to include photos of the potential Venue!!!
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