But first, in general, worthy of description, is the spanish school thing in Guatemala. Some are non-profit organizations raising money for impoverished villages, sending kids to school, funding and building health clinics, and so forth. Some spanish schools just pocket your money. And other spanish schools say they are funding poor people, and then pocket your money.
There are many styles of spanish schools as well:
Some are fancy, pretentious, and snooty...
Some are more modest...and hard to find...
The school I went to is called Proyecto Linguistico Quetzalteco. They are in Xela, along with the majority of schools in Guatemala (most of the gringos in Xela are here to study spanish, volunteer, and learn about Guatemala, which is extremely refreshing compared to the gringos who are here simply to see the popular beautiful spots listed in their stupid guidebooks and avoid the culture... more bitching on that later). The PLQ has a sister school in the mountains - this is the one I went to, and where my rap career has taken off.
The function of this school, as far as supporting the Guatemalan communities, is creating opportunities for a couple villages consisting mostly of laid-off coffee workers. The students eat with the families, whom get paid for feeding us, creating a job for them. A school was built and educational program started. A health clinic was built to limit travel for injury or illness or giving birth.
These are the beautiful faces of the village
The people here are very gentle
Now, most of these folks are day-laborers. The men at least, there is not enough work for the rest of the family. It is possible for them to acquire work, they have hope! There again is some farmwork to be had. They could get paid 30 Quetzales (Q) for the day (about 4$ US). Minimum wage? Well, its 65Q. Min wage is more of a teasing apparition than a concrete effort to limit poverty. Regardless, they can still buy food for the family, even after dropping some of their earnings into transportation for the day (let's say 12Q, leaving them with 18Q for the day). Alright, looks like their working again. Go back for another day, drop 6Q for the ride out there, and, oh shit...no work today. Bummer, they spent almost all of their earnings from one day for nothing, all while they are barely scraping by as it is.
The take home message here is that there is little work in Guatemala. The people who need work the most, have been marginalized to the acidic soils of the mountain forest, not well suited for growing their own sustenance. Another twist of the arm is the loss of income from the (record?) high numbers of USA-deported latinos (under the Obama administration), of whom their families depended on. ¿Se la ví?
Peace,
Ronjon
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