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Peru 9 – Meet the kids

Sunday, January 13th, 2008

 

Vamos a la playa! 

Ah yes…the moment we’ve all been waiting for.  Finally, we get to meet the kids.  I thought I’d better get this post out soon as since I’m consistently getting e-mails that say “I can’t wait to hear about the orphanage.”, “What’s the orphanage like?” and “How are the kids?”.  So here we are…everything you ever wanted to know about the Hogar de Luz Alba. 

For starters, here’s a picture: 

Yep, just a normal house in a residential neighborhood here in Arequipa named Alto Selva Alegre (upper Happy Jungle).  The orphanage exists entirely on donations and volunteers…in fact, the four women who live there permanently are all unpaid volunteers.  I’m not really sure how that works…I guess if your room and board is paid for you may have little need for other money?  The house itself was donated and consists of space for 4 babies in cribs and 14 beds for older kids.  I’m not sure what age ranges they accept but our current age range is 4 months old (they got him as a newborn) up to 9 years old.  When I first started volunteering there were only 12 kids but now we’re up to 15.  So let’s meet them, shall we?

Mauricio, age 2

Jhon, age 2

Jose, age 6 with Jhon

Eydan, age 1.5 and Josep, age 5

Claudia, age 9

Yenifer, age 9 (on her birthday!)

Beatriz, age 8 with Marisol in background

Rosa, age 4

Jhonekerr, age 5

Carlos, age 5

Marisol, age 8

Julio, age 2

Yazmin, age 7 months

Emerson, age 4 months

Eydan, age 1.5

The four women who live permanently in the orphanage consist of Lillian (the director), Sonya, Eugenia and Gladys.  The 3 women aside from Lillian rotate major responsibilities every month…the three areas are: babies, niños and cooking.  Lillian runs the show and the volunteers such as myself pitch in wherever needed.  Usually, a 4 to 5 hour shift for a volunteer includes some time with the older kids, some time with the babies, ironing and washing dishes.  Normally there are 1-2 volunteers in the morning and 1-2 volunteers in the afternoon though the week between Christmas and New Year’s I was the only volunteer all day so was staying from 9 until 3 every day.  I’m sure you can imagine how nice it is to have more hands around to help out.

From left: Eugenia, Yenifer, Lillian, Gladys (hiding in back), Sonya and Carlos (a very frequent Peruvian volunteer)

Just after New Year’s, Lillian rustled up enough money to take the kids on a day long out to the beach at Molliendo which is about 2 hours from Arequipa by car.  Wrangling kids near the strong Pacific currents is a daunting task so she asked me if I’d be willing to come along.  I was happy to oblige though started to reconsider once she told me that we had to leave at 4 am.  Why would we need to leave at such a ridiculous hour, you might be wondering?  Well, just to give you an idea of how things are done here in Peru…we had to leave at 4 am to avoid the police checkpoints on the highways because our van driver did not have authorization to drive his vehicle outside the city limits of Arequipa.  Seriously.

Fun en la piscina!

But, we made it and the kids had a blast.  I was put in charge of the 3 two year-olds which is pretty much a full-time job as you might imagine.  I only nearly lost one of them…Julio…when he took off down the beach chasing a guy selling churros.  I was already holding a sleeping 2 year-old (Jhon) who screamed every time we tried to lay him on a blanket.  Not surprisingly it took me a minute to get up and by the time I went looking for Julio…he was gone.  Heart attack city let me tell you…fortunately a woman from Bolivia I had been chatting with earlier knew he was with me and saw him take off down the beach. 

Gladys and kids

So off I go running…running…carrying a sleeping baby in one arm and chasing after another who acted like he hadn’t been fed in his entire life (we had just had a snack).  I finally got to him, picked him up and trudged back carrying both of them.  I’m sure I was quite the spectacle on the beach…tall, blond, pale gringa toting two Peruvian toddlers.  I’m happy to report, however, that we all made it back in the proper number of pieces and the kids had a great time…they’re still talking about it over a week later.  I’ve included some pictures here…I wish there were more but frankly I was a little tied up with the “triplets.” 

Yenifer and Julio

By and large the kids at the orphanage are well-supplied and well taken care of.  Occasionally the volunteers and the ladies at the orphanage disagree on how things should be done which is largely a function of some cultural differences.  Obviously, we do whatever they say we should do but sometimes they care about stuff we don’t and we care about stuff they don’t.  Probably the thing that drives us all the most insane is their insistence upon wrapping the babies in about a hundred layers.  Now, as we learned in Peru 8…Arequipa is in a desert so only really gets cold at night.  During the day there is little need for 3 layers of clothing plus a blanket.  In fact, the babies are usually so hot and sweaty that we just want to undress them.  Sweaty people make for chilled people…but that fact is lost here in Peru so we just roll with it. 

Feliz cumpleaños Yenifer!

Aside from the beach outing we do get to take the kids on other outings sometimes.  When we have enough volunteers (and for whatever reason, Lillian specifically requires at least one man) we can take them to a nearby park and usually once a month Jay and Luis organize a bigger outing on a Saturday to one of the larger Arequipa parks.  They also do proper birthday parties for the kids too…as you can see in the pictures.  This one is for Yenifer who turned 9 last week…all the kids get dressed up and she gets cake and a present and a grand entrance.  It was really nice and really fun.

More birthday fun…

How the orphanage acquires the children is somewhat of a mystery to me.  Some of the kids have parents who visit or are at least somewhat involved in their lives (though I haven’t seen a parent yet).  Some get taken (or voluntarily surrendered) because their parents can’t (or won’t) take care of them.  Some parents are on drugs…some are abusive.  I know some of the kids’ stories…Rosa and Julio were pulled from their home after I arrived for abuse by their parents.  Emerson was abandoned at the hospital by his 15 year-old mother.  We have several sibling groups: Jose and Jhon, Josep and Mauricio, Rosa and Julio, Beatriz and Carlos.  Claudia is actually not an “orphan”…her mom is Sonya…one of the live-in volunteers…it sounds like they had a bad situation at home which is how Sonya and Claudia came to Luz Alba.

Jhon, Jacqueline (volunteer from Australia) and Stacey

And that pretty much sums it up for now.  Hopefully I’ll get some more pictures of the kids before I go so these won’t be the last that you see.  Coming soon…lots of interesting stuff from Puno and Lake Titicaca.  Type to later!

Peru 7 – Navidad and Año Nuevo

Saturday, January 5th, 2008

Greetings blog readers! Sorry I’ve been slacking again…the kids at the orphanage plus my Spanish classes are keeping me extremely busy so my time in the Internet cafe has been limited. I’m back now and will try to drum up some blogworthy material here in the coming month..the blog is always a bit more of a challenge when I’m stationary somewhere and not traveling. Rest assured that I am always thinking of you…my faithful blog readers.

So after Lindsay headed back to the States I hopped on a plane going south to the southern Peruvian city of Arequipa. Way back when I was in Ecuador I attended Spanish classes with a girl from NYC who was planning to volunteer as a nurse in a clinic for a year in Arequipa. Originally I planned to just pop in and visit her over the week between Christmas and New Year’s as I originally planned to volunteer in an orphanage in the central highlands of Peru…further north in Huancayo. Arequipa is a known stop on the gringo trail as there is lots to do in and around the city…plus I didn’t really feel like backtracking up to Huancayo so instead I sought out a new volunteer project in Arequipa. And here I am.

The boys singing. From left:Jhonekerr, Jose, Carlos, Josep

Mauricio

The volunteer project I’m working in is coordinated by the newlywed couple of Jay (England) and Luis (Peru) and the current two projects are helping out in the orphanage as well as working with kids in a local, rural community. I’ve opted to stay in the shared apartment in the volunteer residence of the project but my room wasn’t available until the 27th so instead I went and spent a few days with Karen at her volunteer residence.

Karen is working with a very cool priest in a Catholic Mission program here in Arequipa that includes several projects…a clinic, nutrition and food program, social work and child sponsorship by foreigners. Father Alex was gracious enough to let me crash their very nicely appointed volunteer residence so I spent about 4 days there with Karen and the other two volunteers…Susan, a physician’s assistant from NYC and her husband Dennis.

As luck would have it, the Christmas party for the orphanage was being held on Christmas Eve and Jay and Luis invited me to attend and meet the kids. Karen opted to come with me and we spent a fun-filled afternoon with the 12 kids at the orphanage. They were so cute…they all got dressed up in their best dresses and their little suits waiting for us to arrive. I’ve included some pictures here but don’t worry…you’ll get to see lots more pictures of the kids and hear all of their stories in the coming weeks.

Mass with Father Alex

People who know me well will be surprised to hear that I spent my Christmas Eve at a Catholic Mass. While the service was long it was interesting and much more fun than the masses I’ve been to previously. Father Alex is quite the entertainer and Peruvians love to sing so he got out his guitar and played a few tunes for us. Another defining feature of Christmas in Peru is the prevalence of extremely elaborate (and in some circles we might say tacky) nativity scenes. I’ve included the enormous one in the church here…but in reality the nativity sets in people’s homes are just as big and include some rather interesting characters (eg. the nativity in my landlady’s house includes a rather graphic model of a sheep giving birth).

Christmas Day was fun and relaxing and included a lovely restaurant that Father Alex took us to for lunch followed by a homemade eggplant parmesan for supper and the obligatory viewing of “It’s a Wonderful Life”. And while it didn’t feel much like Christmas to me without the snow and tree…a good time was had by all here in the desert of Arequipa.

Jay and Luis

Jay and Stacey

Jonathan and Sol

Richard and Fiona

For New Year’s Eve I went out on the town with some of the other volunteers including Jay and Luis, the fun English couple of Fiona and Richard (who are wrapping up their two year around-the-world-trip), Jay’s sister Sol, volunteer Jonathan and Jay and Sol’s dad who has been visiting from the Canary Islands. Off we went to a local club for some drinks and dancing following by the obligatory New Year’s Day hangover and exhaustion. Again, a good time was had by all for the holidays here in Peru.

As promised I’ve included a bunch of the extra jungle pictures that I didn’t get a chance to include in Peru 5 and 6. They’re thumbnails so if you want to see them more closely just click on them…and if not, then just ignore them. Coming soon…a guided tour of Arequipa and you’ll all finally get to meet the kids at the orphanage…

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