May 10, 2005
If you can read this . . .
If you are reading this, chances are that you are not Guatemalan. Or, at least, that you did not spend your formative years in Guatemala. What do I mean by this? Simple. Guatemala has a huge literacy problem. We witnessed it first hand on the plane coming home. To give credit where credit is due, my wife picked up on it first and clued me in.
A substantial number of people boarding the plane to NY in Guatemala City could not read their boarding passes. The crew, knowing this, had to tell them where they were sitting by either leading the passengers to their seats, almost taking them by their hands, or by pointing to exactly which seat they had. One of the crew confirmed to my wife that a lot of people boarding in Guatemala could not read and needed the crew to fill out all of their immigration and customs forms. The crew did say that some of the passengers asked them to do it out of laziness and not because they couldn't read, but still. The crew came from El Salvador, by the way.
Can you imagine what that must be like? Navigating the rocks and shoals of modern life without being able to make sense of the world around you? Or, maybe you compensate, like where one sense gets stronger when another when gets weaker. Beats me. But to be deprived of reading poetry.
The literacy rates are very poor, according to the research I've done. Actually, one UNESCO graph is particularly interesting because it casts the information in the form of illiteracy percentages. If you click on the link, you will see that almost 4 out of every 10 Guatemalan women are illiterate and about 2.5 out of every 10 men are illiterate. Those numbers tower over all of the other countries UNESCO includes in their graph.
One aspect of the literacy problem fairly leaps off the page: the disparity between literacy rates for men and for women. This suggests that women have much more restricted access to formal education than the men do. It also suggests that women have it much tougher in general in Guatemalan society. Or, at least, maybe they do. I don't really know enough to fully draw that last conclusion. But is does suggest that, ipso facto, fewer opportunities exist for women as we in the developed world understand those opportunities.
No matter how you look at it, it's a total mess.
Still, I don't want to leave this topic with the implication that there is no hope. Since 1980, some 25 years ago, the rate of adult illiteracy has dropped from 47% of the population to 29.5%. That suggests hope, right?
Posted by: Random Penseur at
04:04 PM
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The funny thing about illiterate people is you can write funny things about them and they will never know! Same goes for the Amish! How's that for comic relief? !
About the post below...Boy Child and my little girl Natalie are similar. My little one is learning both Norsk and Engelsk. It's amazing what these little minds soak up! It astounds me daily. she is already able to understand, under 2 years of age, that I prefer she speak English and Mamma likes to hear Norsk.
Posted by: dr Pants at May 11, 2005 07:53 PM (ZnZYY)
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We just don't realize that some foreign educational systems are so cruddy and/or non-existent. But, it was like that in part of America years ago, too.
25 years ago I worked with an older black man originally from Mississippi. O'd estimate that he was born around 1920 and grew up in the '20s and '30s.
He'd never gone to school when he was growing up and was almost completely illiterate. But, he'd still give a go every so often. At the age of about 60, he would look at a sign and try to read it.
"No... sni..smock... smoking... no smoking! Is that right?"
He was a character and I can't believe that I've forgotten his name after all these years.
Posted by: Tuning Spork at May 12, 2005 10:08 PM (wi7Y0)
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Yep, now we can all read in America, but we still get taught that it's okay to dissect live dogs in class, that Palestine was a country stolen from the indigenous people by the Jews, and that the world was created in six days a mere 6000 years ago. Fat lot of good reading does some people! For details, see my latest posts.
Posted by: Mark at May 15, 2005 02:15 AM (NOQgC)
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May 09, 2005
Back from Guatemala
I am back from Guatemala, arriving home at a little after 1:00 this morning. I lack the coherence to give a full and reflective report, so, instead, I'm going to sort of sum up in a series of stand alone vignettes and random thoughts:
*They should just admit that the country is humid and that central air conditioning is helpful.
*I'm sure I've said this before, but Guatemala is an exciting, vibrant, lovely, dirty, sometimes scary place, filled with kind and gentle people who carry lots of guns, all the time, all over the place.
*Driving behind a pickup truck in which six National Policemen were sitting in the open bed of the truck, on the walls of the bed, was scary enough but when one of them started playing with his Uzi, I wanted to throw myself over the children and close my eyes. All we needed was a pothole. Big sigh of relief when they turned off the road.
*The National Zoo in Guatemala City is a friendly place and we were there on a day when the place was filled with children from outside the city. They were mostly indigenous peoples and we dressed, many of them, in traditional clothes. They were flat out fascinated by my blond haired blue eyes kids and spent a lot of time looking at them and talking about them. The Girl Child became uncomfortable with being stared at for so long and by so many. The Boy Child was oblivious. My mother in law explained that these children had probably never seen anyone who looked like my children.
*Marimba, when played for the locals and not the tourists, can be a lot of fun. It must have something to do with the vibe of the people listening and dancing to it.
*I know I've written about fruit in Guatemala before, but it is so damn good. We also had some other cool things:
pacaya: A vegetable, the initial blossom of a variety of date palm tree; has a slight bitter taste. Used in salads; deep fried in egg batter or served in a tomato based sauce. Most appreciated by Guatemalans and Salvadorians. Consumed year round in particular during Holy Week and November 1 (All Souls/Dia de los Difuntos).
and
Huiquil (which I am spelling wrong and which we had in a soup.
*More later on a couple of other topics from the trip.
Posted by: Random Penseur at
11:33 AM
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Welcome back and congrats a completing a safe trip. Hope ya had fun!
Posted by: Tuning Spork at May 09, 2005 10:06 PM (GLq2P)
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I am glad to see you are back safely. I read your accounts with great interest and a little sadness. I miss that part of the world.
Posted by: Alex at May 10, 2005 02:59 AM (yIfpp)
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My blonde neices and nephews went through something similar in Hong Kong, a little unsettling, esp when large groups of mainland tourists tried to pick them up to pose with for photos.
Posted by: Mia at May 10, 2005 03:15 AM (jdu1C)
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Fascinating! Sounds like an amazing little excursion. The whole 'police truck' part would have terrified me as well. My world is so much different.
I had a friend from Guatamala. He was very fiery. Did you see that is the people there? Did they appear to get easily worked up about things?
Posted by: dr Pants at May 10, 2005 03:16 AM (ZnZYY)
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Hah! - Gotcha! Welcome back.
Posted by: Mark at May 10, 2005 10:44 AM (wdk9M)
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Welcome back! Looking forward to some more Guatemala pictures.
Posted by: Jim at May 10, 2005 12:05 PM (tyQ8y)
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May 06, 2005
How do you feed the children?
The newspaper headline this morning here in Guatemala City was stark: 50% of Guatemalan Children Are Chronically Malnourished. It came with a helpful photograph of three small children sitting by the side of the road eating some meager looking tortillas. The poverty in Guatemala is breathtaking, as I'm sure poverty is anywhere. But when you put that statistic to it, it becomes much smaller and more immediate, the scope of the poverty, that is. Poverty becomes a hungry child, it's really that simple.
The consequences, it seems to me, are much graver than simply a child without enough to eat, a child who goes to bed hungry. Chronic malnutrition will stunt brain growth and will make it easier for disease to grab ahold. The malnourished child today, assuming he lives, will be the burden to society later, unable to earn more than a subsistence wage, if that. This seems fairly obvious. Solve the hunger problem and you give society as a whole a fighting chance.
The problem is that I don't see it changing in the near future.
Pity the hungry children in Guatemala. They deserve at least that.
I feel totally helpless.
Posted by: Random Penseur at
05:09 PM
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I feel like that everyday. Now that I have a child I feel it deep inside me even more. The scary part is that many Americans are completely oblivious to it.
"We just want cheap gas man!"
Posted by: Dr Pants at May 06, 2005 06:01 PM (ZnZYY)
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I don't know that I can agree, Doc. One, I think it is difficult to generalize about what many of 250 million people think. And two, I think that by and large Americans are a pretty generous people who are concerned about world hunger and about children in general. There are lots of volunteer opportunities for those who are inclined to get involved.
That said, I certainly wouldn't mind some cheaper gas!
Any way, thanks for your comment, even if I happen to disagree. But after all, that's what makes a horse race.
Posted by: RP at May 06, 2005 08:15 PM (Ss8by)
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If there is a large portion of the population that is hardened towards the malnourished and starving children, I think some of the blame should be put on the media. When I turn on the tv in the afternoon on weekends or at non-peak hours and the local station is playing a 1 hour infomercial with constant pictures of kids with bloated bellies and sad eyes, it almost makes me sick.
The constant bombardment of emotion wrenching images, especially when you personally are unable to help in any way make you feel helpless and most people just turn off, shut out, and change the channel. It's a numbing of our conscience, and it's not helping. I KNOW there are starving children, I KNOW there are abused and endangered animals, but there's nothing I can do, no money I can give and sentiment doesn't exactly fill their bellies with food.
Posted by: Oorgo at May 09, 2005 01:41 PM (lM0qs)
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It's so sad when you think about how much there is to do to safeguard children. From either Guatemala or anywhere else...
Posted by: Jester at May 09, 2005 10:22 PM (yS8Mo)
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I think 2nd hardest job I ever had to do was volunteering to be an aid worker for several months in the amazon jungle.
It was gut and heart wrenching work, but one in which I did my part to help. That's why I'm somewhat involved with heifer.org. It not only gives people the tools to "fish" or farm, it teaches them how to do it! The only true way to combat hunger is by addressing and undoing the issues that cause it, rather than throwing money at a problem (which is always needed short term) which needs better and more well planned solutions long term.
Another great post! Thanks... that's it for me...3 comments is my max per site.
Posted by: michele at May 10, 2005 01:00 PM (ht2RK)
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