Weekend Video: love.futbol in Guatemala
I came across this video earlier this week when a family friend from our time in Guatemala shared it on Facebook. It's from an organization I'd never heard of before, called love.futbol, which "develops simple, safe soccer fields for children in impoverished communities worldwide." This particular video features a project in a small town overlooking the beautiful Lake Atitlan, one of my favorite places in the world. It's a fun video with a cool concept and what seem to be tangible results. Enjoy!
San Marcos
It's only mid-day on Monday so I don't have a whole lot to report, but I have arrived in San Marcos, where I'll be spending the rest of the day and night before leaving for Sipacapa in the morning. My contact here is an Eastern alum from my program a few years back who is working for an NGO in the area. This afternoon I have an interview with someone from the Diocese (the Catholic Church's social arm) and I think he'll be an excellent source of information.
So about the ride out here... There were just three of us in the minivan this morning - myself and two Dutch women who are volunteering at a school in Xela. I sat in the front and had a nice long chat with the driver, which allowed me to ask him anything I could think of about Guatemala: do the police still pull people over and fine them for no reason? do the university students still block off city streets leading up to Holy Week in order to collect money for their parties? is Lake Amatitlan (not Atitlan) clean enough to swim in? do you think the future is bright for Guatemala? do you know how the heck I can get to San Marcos without taking a chicken bus? He had answers to these questions: yes, yes, heavens no, no way, I don't know, respectively.
I got dropped off at the bus terminal in Xela with my eyes open for the two bus companies that were apparently less shady than the rest, but hadn't taken more than a step or two before I heard a guy yelling ''San Marcos'', so I talked to him and arranged a ride in another minivan for about $1.25 (double that to include my stuff on the seat beside me). The ride was harrowing at times as we passed buses and trucks on hairpin turns up and down steep hills, but I just kept reminding myself that the driver probably wanted to stay alive as much as I did. Probably.
But at one point during this ride it occurred to me that I felt right at home, and in some ways more so than I ever had when we lived in Guatemala. Back then I did all I could to stay inside an English-speaking, Americanized bubble. I was clearly not Guatemalan and every day reminded me of that. But now that I have lived in the US for more than a decade and have become accustomed to the North American way of life, I have been able to embrace my roots in Guatemala, because among my friends this background is a distinguishing feature of my story. Add that to the fact that my Spanish is better now (by leaps and bounds, I think) than it ever was when we lived here and voila! - my sense of belonging here, now, makes some sense. But still, ain't no place like Lancaster.
Sunday at the lake
This morning I awoke to my last day where there are tourists before I head on to the highlands. It is Sunday, but because I am in a lake town that is not particularly devout (based on appearances) I didn't plan to go to church. Instead, lying in bed I read a few entries from Devotional Classics, namely John Calvin, Blaise Pascal, and Thomas a Kempis. Lightweights, I know.
Eventually I wandered down to the lake for a stroll, and in doing so I passed a group of people under a tree, singing. I kept walking, and when I got to the end of the easily walkable shoreline I turned back and when I came upon this group again they were all standing up and reading Scripture in unison. I went ahead and stuck around for the sermon on the beginning of Jesus' ministry from the book of Mark, which in Spanish is of course San Marcos, which happens to be the name of the place I'm headed tomorrow. I followed along in my ESV pocket Bible as the pastor spoke from his Spanish version. Maybe it just struck me this way as a naive, enamored outsider, but it seems to me that despite all the theological training and meeting facilities and conferences and books and padded seats at 72 degrees that we tend to enjoy as normal parts of our church experiences, the congregation of the Pentecostal Church of God in Panajachel had a lot less cultural baggage to sort through today to get to the heart of the gospel than would have a church I consider normal back home. He spoke of Jesus, the son of a carpenter whose name wouldn't have meant anything to anyone in the city, who is therefore introduced by Mark as the Son of God. He spoke of Jesus being tempted in the wilderness and when the pastor pointed up at the steep hillsides surrounding the lake to make his point, I think the people got it in a way that might normally escape us. And I skimmed ahead to the passage they'll cover next week: Jesus making 'fishers of men'. Wow.
This afternoon I spoke on the phone with my contact in Sipacapa, who didn't immediately seem to understand who I was, but after repeating my name a few times, saying I am the son of Pablo and Susana, he got it. But it had me worried for a moment, since a lot is riding on this guy. As it turns out, he will be driving to San Marcos first thing Tuesday morning and will give me a ride to Sipacapa in his car, thus relieving me of the stress of wondering if there is any sort of mass transit system in those parts.
So that's it from here. Tomorrow at 7am I catch a ride to Quetzaltenango, where I hope to then find a bus out to San Marcos wherein my stuff will not be stolen and I will not have to deal with the smell of chickens. But if chicken buses are the only option, then by golly, chicken bus it will be.