Building Community… Seed by Seed

[In April, Sister Parish board members and founders traveled to Central America for a special 25th Anniversary Delegation. In the coming weeks, we’ll be posting reflections from delegates about the delegation. Our first reflection is from Nancy Wiens, who is one of our new board members and a member of St Joan of Arc Catholic Church in Minneapolis, MN. You can read other reflections from the 25th Anniversary Delegation here.]

I want to believe that the whole world 
Is my home, the field that I sow,
And that all reap what all have sown.
-Dom Helder Camara
 

When I first went on a Sister Parish delegation from St. Joan of Arc Church in Minneapolis, I didn’t realize I was starting the long journey to ‘build community’ across borders.  My motivations were simple — to see a part of the world unfamiliar to me and to learn about Guatemala’s culture, history and people.  Little did I know that, through my experiences and the people I met there, I was planting seeds that would eventually blossom into a much deeper interconnectedness with our community of friends in Guatemala. Continue reading

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Conchita (left) and Aldina (right) share their early Sister Parish memories.

[Throughout the year, we’ll be posting periodic reflections from Sister Parish community members in honor of our 25th Anniversary. In today’s reflection, Aldina and Conchita look back on the early years of Sister Parish. Aldina and Conchita are members of UPAVIM, a women’s cooperative in Guatemala City. UPAVIM is the first Sister Parish community in Guatemala. They are currently in a sistering relationship with First United Methodist Church in Downers Grove, IL. You can read more 25th anniversary reflections from Sister Parish community members here.]

How do you remember Sister Parish’s start in Guatemala?

Aldina: In 1980, a man named Richard Fenske arrived with his wife to our community,  La Esperanza, with intentions of studying Spanish, but after being in the community they realized that there was a great lack in health services. Mr. Fenske at that time was working on bringing groups to Guatemala through Sister Parish, but had not brought one yet. At that time I was attending the health workshops of his wife, Barbara, with other women from the community. The workshops taught us how to properly care for our children and included other health topics. At that time in my life I had an alcoholic husband and was an abused woman. Continue reading

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Celebrating Women’s Day

On March 8, thousands of men, women, young people gathered in Guatemala City to honor International Women’s Day in Guatemala.

With banners, chants, and music, men and women walked from the Guatemalan Supreme Court to Congress to the Public Prosecutor’s Office to Central Park.  Despite the occasional machista comment from spectators on the sidewalk, the march is a celebratory one every year, open to anyone who believes in and fights for gender equality and justice.   Sister Parish member communities Tierra Nueva I and II brought a bus packed with over 50 people in for the march.

We hope these photos share some of that celebratory spirit.

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Over 50 women from Tierra Nueva I and II took a bus into the city to participate.

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A Guatemalan youth theater group shares their talents.

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Participants included men, women, youth and children.

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Women from Tierra Nueva II raise the banner.

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The banner reading, “We are all Ixil women. We honor the Ixil women that will testify in the first genocide case in Guatemala,” reminds participants of the many layers of women’s struggles. Read more about the genocide case and solidarity actions.

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Twenty Five Years of Memories: The beginning

IMG_7586[Throughout the year, we’ll be posting periodic reflections from Sister Parish community members in honor of our 25th Anniversary. In today’s reflection, our founder Vicki Schmidt looks back on the early years of Sister Parish. Vicki founded Sister Parish with Dick Fenske in 1988. Her parish Faith Lutheran Church, of West Fargo, ND, is in a sistering relationship with Tierra Nueva I in Guatemala City.]

Chronos and kairos are two Greek words that shed light on the way I understand life.  Chronos time sets us on linear movement through life, as in chronology, in that events and situations take place in predictable ways and follow in a logical manner. Kairos moments are those which break into our ordered chronological timeline, unsuspecting, disrupting, and shaking us out of ordinary time into new possibilities that forever change us.

Sister Parish, Inc. is all about kairos times.  My first invitation to experience life in Central America came from my bishop in 1984, because he knew of my work with refugees and the trip included visiting a refugee camp in El Salvador. I was active in resettling refugees at the time and knew the time in a refugee camp would offer new insights about why people flee from their homelands to become citizens without a country.

As I traveled  in Mexico, Nicaragua and El Salvador on that trip, my life was daily re-formed and transformed.  I “morphed” into a new being, as if I was walking one way and did an about face to move in new and challenging directions. Kairos.  How do I understand how this happened?

Multiple concerns nearly stopped me from making the trip.  Leaving three preschool  children behind, and spending money not in our family budget were issues I had difficulty reconciling.  During the debate with myself whether or not to go on this trip, a sixteen-year-old boy presented me with the money to make the trip.  Unbelieveable!  Sixteen-year-olds don’t usually have that kind of money, and  certainly wouldn’t just give it away!  It was a sign for me to go.  Indeed, kairos.

That wasn’t a stand alone happening, however.  I participated in a national Lutheran social ministry event in Miami, Florida, after my travels to Central America.  I took the place of my husband, who was slated to attend.  It was there Dick Fenske and I met in a small group discussion about refugees, and instantaneously we began the walk together that eventually opened the door to the organization of Sister Parish.  Being in that group with Dick was kairos.

One of Faith Lutheran Church's early delegations to Guatemala in 1992.

One of Faith Lutheran Church’s early delegations to Guatemala in 1992.

The pattern of kairos didn’t stop there, but manifest itself over andover in the ways staff became part of the organization, the ways faith communities in the north and south opened up to the calling and  process, and the ways the vision and mission of Sister Parish evolved into new life changing realities.

In the early days of Sister Parish only sparse, irregular communication took place among staff, who were primarily located in Central America.  Email did not exist for us and no one had a computer until much later.  Phoning was out of our league financially, and most staff had no easy access to phones.  And yet Sister Parish continued to evolve.   I was doing recruitment of sister parishes in the US, and Dick was making contacts with communities in Central America and on the east coast where he lived when he returned from his Guatemala home in Mezquital.

Both of us were Lutheran and had many contacts in the Lutheran Church, so that’s where we primarily found sister parishes in the beginning.  Each of those linkages were built on kairos for those open to seize the moments and allow them to break through the chronos of their lives – both in the south and north.

Kairos – moments and situations that break into our lives which transform us forever.  We all often miss  such moments and leave opportunities untouched, but the creation Sister Parish is clearly a bundle of kairos moments all tied together through 25 years by the common thread of the Spirit, who continues to lead and feed the vision, and prods our restless souls to walk into unknown ventures.  To God be the glory.

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Guatemala Representatives Meeting: February 23-24, 2013

ImageRepresentatives from seven of the nine Sister Parish communities in Guatemala gathered February 23rd and 24th, 2013. Saturday morning began with introductions and an icebreaker to help people become acquainted with each other. This meeting served as a time for communities to give updates on activities, share linkage history, and plan for the Southern Encounter in El Salvador in April, as well as other activities for the 25th Anniversary of Sister Parish. Later, representatives welcomed a guest speaker, who gave valuable information on the case against Efrain Ríos Montt and a brief history of genocide in Guatemala, followed by a fascinating discussion about different forms of genocide that exist today. On Sunday, the representatives held an ecumenical service, with the theme of loving your neighbor as you love yourself.

Guatemala Directiva 2013-2014

President Otto (San Andrés Itzapa)
Vice President Dina (UPAVIM)
Secretary Eluvia (Tierra Nueva II)
Treasurer Esmirna (UPAVIM)
Member at Large 1 Ricardo (Las Margaritas II)
Member at Large 2 Tomas (Chontalá)

Representatives in Attendance

Sepalau: Daniel and Eduardo
Las Margaritas II: Ricardo and Miguel
Tierra Nueva II: Eluvia, Manuel, and Clementina
Tierra Nueva I: Absent
Chichipate: Pedro and Alfonzo
Chontalá: Tomas, Maria Luisa and Tomasa
UPAVIM: Dina and Esmirna
San Andrés Itzapa: Otto and Basilia
San Antonio Cunén: Absent
Sister Parish Staff: Carrie (Executive Director), Brian (Guatemala Regional Coordinator)

Topics Discussed

Southern Encounter
The representatives were very excited to learn that planning for the Southern Encounter is moving forward. Each community will now begin the process of selecting a representative to attend the event in El Salvador in April. The Guatemala Directiva suggested doing a traditional Guatemalan dance to contribute to the cultural activities on the agenda.

25th Anniversary of Sister Parish
In celebration of the 25th anniversary of Sister Parish, communities in Guatemala throughout the year will be conducting interviews about the history of their linkages and what Sister Parish has meant to them to post on our blog. These interviews will include various forms of media, some video and others written. Visit our website or contact staff to see how you can connect to all activities we have planned for this year. Thanks to northern board donations of time and design expertise, we now have beautiful Sister Parish 25th Anniversary apparel.

Future Events
Representatives discussed the 2013 Solidarity Walk and September Representatives Meeting.

Educational Topic: Genocide Case
Presented by the Association for Justice and Reconciliation (AJR)

The Guatemala Directiva decided to postpone the previously scheduled theme of cellular towers and focus on the case of Efraín Ríos Montt, former head of state, army general, and president of the Guatemalan congress. The former head of state and members of his high command are accused of committing genocide against the Maya Ixil people in the early 1980s. For legal reasons, the case only focuses on the Ixil region, although Ríos Montt’s scorched earth policy was carried out throughout the country. The trial is set for mid-March. Provided it proceeds, Guatemala will be the first country in the Americas to try a former head of state for genocide on home soil. The guest speaker from the Association for Justice and Reconciliation (AJR) shared updates on the case and discussed with representatives what this genocide case means for Guatemala moving forward.

Notes for Upcoming Events

  • The next representatives meeting will take place September 20-22, 2013. Communities will bring Q30 to support expenditures.
  • Cooks for next meeting: Tierra Nueva 1 or Tierra Nueva 2
  • Educational topic: Cell phone towers – What are the benefits and impacts?

 Featured Links (click to follow)

Guatemala Directiva

Future Sister Parish Activities and Events

25th Anniversary Apparel 

Blog Article: Rios Montt

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Government of El Salvador asked once again to take leadership in banning metallic mining

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(This article was originally posted by StopMining.org)

San Salvador, February 4th, 2012

The NationalRoundtable Against Metallic Mining in El Salvador(La Mesa) reiterated in a press conference thismorning its petition for the Salvadoran Government to introduce legislation to place a definite ban to metallic mining in the country.

The call was made as a response to a recent report released by the El Salvador’s Human Rights Ombudsman that highlights the potential violations to the human rights of Salvadorans by cross border contamination stemming from the Cerro Blanco project located in Guatemala, and recent legislation in the neighboring country of Honduras that opens the gate to a flood of mining projects located in the border with El Salvador.

Edgardo Mira,  spokesperson for La Mesa made reference to a total 49 metal mining projects that are on the border with the neighboring countries of Guatemala(8) and Honduras (41) as they represent a probable threat of contamination in the near future.   Vidalina Morales, a native of the department of Cabañas and spokesperson for la Mesa declared that “we(La mesa) stress once again that contamination in the subsoil and the basin of the Lempa River, from mining projects in the border with Guatemala and Honduras is incompatible with the improvement of the quality of life for Salvadorans, as well as, the enjoyment, protection and promotion of human rights to water, health and  a healthy environment.”

International support for La Mesa’s position was also expressed in the form  a letter, endorsed by 80 civil society organizations from 14 different countries, presented during the press conference by Alexandra Early, a member of a coalition of organizations based in the U.S. and Canada whose main purpose is to support the work of la Mesa. “The negative impact of large-scale industrial mining in local communities is not just a regional problem, but a problem of global scale” read Early from a written statement.  As such “communities around the world that are inspired by the work of La Mesa have come together to show their support for its struggle to end metallic mining in El Salvador”

During the press conference members of La Mesa expressed their solidarity with civil society organizations in Guatemala and Honduras, sisters in their struggle for life and the defense of territories, access to clean water and natural ecosystems. They also mentioned the necessity to ban metal mining in El Salvador in order to legitimately require neighboring countries to cancel extractive projects that could affect life locally.

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See videos of the press conference conference (in Spanish)

http://youtu.be/5khtmyoUubY

http://youtu.be/Wf_Yt3FuSig

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See coverage in local media (in Spanish)

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Former Dictator Faces Trial in Guatemala

Photo Credit: Al Jazeera

 Last month, Guatemala made history when it became the first country to decide to try a former leader for genocide on home soil.

On January 28, a judge ruled that General Jose Efrain Rios Montt would stand trial for acts of genocide committed while he ruled Guatemala from 1982-1983.  During his time as head of state, thousands of people,  the majority indigenous Maya, were massacred and disappeared by the Guatemalan armed forces.   Among other objectives, the military sought to remove what they saw as a natural base of support for the guerrilla forces during the armed conflict.

The trial is important both because of its historic nature, and because of the potential implications for Guatemala’s current president, Otto Pérez Molina.  Pérez Molina is a former general and acted as a commander in the Ixil region under Rios Montt. The region was one of the hardest hit by the violence of the war and is the focus of the genocide case.

We’ll keep you updated on news from the trial as it develops. In the meantime, here are some great sources on what’s happened so far:

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Walking in Solidarity in Bloomington, Indiana

Members of the Board and St Thomas Lutheran Church

On November 9-10 Sister Parish board members gathered in Bloomington, IN for the fall board meeting. They were hosted by St. Thomas Lutheran Church, which has a Sister Parish relationship with Santo Domingo de Guzman, Chichipate in Guatemala.

In addition to working hard at their meeting, the board also had a great time visiting with their friends at St. Thomas. A highlight of the weekend was the joint St. Thomas-Board of Directors Solidarity Walk, where both communities came together to walk, pray, sing and support Sister Parish. The community of St. Thomas raised almost $800 for Sister Parish on their walk, in addition to the money that individual members of the board raised.

Thanks to our friends at St. Thomas for being such wonderful hosts, and for reminding us that hospitality is at the heart of the Sister Parish mission.

Singing songs of solidarity on the Solidarity Walk

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1976 and Now

Wednesday, November 7, after a 7.2 Richter Scale earthquake, many fears were reawakened in Guatemala. Many people rushed to call loved ones, secure food and water, or save a neighbor buried under the rubble. For many Guatemalans, this was a déjà vu moment and for others, this was a moment to learn about their parents recent and haunting past.  On February 4, 1976, a devastating earthquake killed more than 22,000 people in Guatemala.

The Aftermath

Source: prensalibre.com

Last week’s earthquake, with an epicenter off the Pacific coast of Guatemala, reportedly killed over 50 people and injured over one hundred more.  At the time of publication, 23 people were still missing. As communities in San Marcos, Solola, and Quetzaltenango continue to rebuild, reports of injuries, disappearances, and deaths increase. Thankfully, Guatemala Sister Parish members were fortunate and were not directly affected by the earthquake.  Many members, however, are concerned about their fellow Guatemalans and extended family members. The hardest-hit areas are Quetzaltenango and San Marcos. The Sister Parish organization and its members will continue to pray for and support the communities in need here in Guatemala.

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Source: prensalibre.com

Each year, an estimated 20,000 migrants are kidnapped each year in Mexico. These numbers are of course disputed by international human rights organizations, the Mexican government, and families that are the victims of such acts. What is not refutable are the 72 corpses of migrants that were found in the Mexican town of San Fernando in August of 2010 and families who have yet to receive word from loved ones who have trekked the dangerous terrain . Sadly, families are unable to obtain information or support from the Mexican government.

On October 19, 2012, after a Honduran mother was able to locate her missing son, a group of mothers called “Freeing Hope” began its march through Mexico with the purpose of drawing attention to the criminal elements functioning in Mexico. Starting in Puerto de Tampico, passing through towns such as the aforesaid San Fernando, and ending in the town of Reynosa which borders Texas.  The march will cover 2,485 miles and 14 of 32 Mexican states. 

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