Monday, October 29, 2007

Travelers Not Tourists

We´ve seen a lot of great stuff on our trip so far, but today may have been the most uplifting experience yet. We were on a high on our way home from our first day of work with the Traveler Not Tourist program in Arequipa, Peru. We thought that we would be working at a school, but TNT is doing very well and the school was fully staffed today. Instead, we went to an after-school program on the outskirts of the city in the Chachani community.


Arequipa is the second largest city in Peru, but after a 45 minute bus ride, it seemed like we were in the middle of nowhere. The people there are very poor. They are basically working towards squatter´s rights. After two years, they will own the land. Right now, the houses are underdeveloped with limited plumbing and electricty.

Getting there was an adventure in and of itself. We took a local "bus", which is basically a van. A fare collector stands half out the door soliciting passengers. On occasion, he jumps out while the van in still going into a full sprint to the corner. He stops at the corner, gets some paper stamped and jumps back into the van A-Team style while we are making our turn. Very entertaining!

When we finally arrived, we sought out one of the community leaders for some essential supplies, some shelf board that would serve as our student´s desks, a basketball, volleyball, and of course a futbol. We went to our "classroom" (a combination basketball court / soccer field with concrete stadium seating) while Stephanie, our young prodigy, rounded up the local kids.

We would have an hour for english and an hour for sports. The crowd was thin at first. We were warned that the kids would be shy until they saw that some other brave kids were having fun. With only a couple of students, we got warmed up with a little volleyball before eventually turning to Frisbee. When we said that Stephanie was a prodigy, we mean with her English, but she had some disc skills as well. Within minutes, she graduated from a backhand to a forehand!

Eventually, we had critical mass for an English lesson. We prepared some exercises to teach the children colors in English. Some of the students already knew quite a bit of English. Others had absolutely no clue, a familiar classroom experience for both of us.





It´s amazing how such little things can make them happy. We brought some colored pencils for them to color with and a huge bottle of water for them to share. Both were big hits! They colored for a while and worked hard to complete an English colors crossword puzzle. Then it was time for games!







They loved Frisbee (or el disco), The girls especially enjoyed it. Some of the boys were stubborn to give up their soccer, but eventually everyone gave it a try.

Chris tossed with some girls while they all screamed "lista" (ready). They all wanted the disc! Without any prodding, they formed a line and took turns thowing and catching. Meanwhile, Jen was teaching another group of kids how to throw.

Well, we couldn´t pass up an opportunity like this. With no trouble at all, we joined the two groups, set up two lines, and actually had them running a go-to drill. Watch out for Peru at Worlds in 15-20 years!

We´re hopeful to get out and see the kids again tomorrow. Since it´s in the middle of nowhere, we need an escort to get there without getting lost. Stacy, an Australian who has been here for a couple weeks, showed us around today. She was great! If we can find an escort, we will go again tomorrow. If not, we´ll be out there on Wednesday with a Halloween lesson of paper Jack-O-Lanterns and face painting.

Enjoy the rest of these photos....
This girl was a natural. At first, she was terrified to catch the disc, but would scramble for any disc on the ground. She loved to throw. Eventually, after handling a couple of high floaty backhands, she was brave enough to throw and catch. We´ll make a handler out of her yet!
Chris waits his turn in line during the drill. They needed some work on their high 5´s.
The kids are hard at work while we review colors. They had a little problem with rasing their hands. They raised them and shouted out the answer at the same time.
This kid, Fernando, was hilarious! He was launching full field hucks with his flick! We had to get him to reel it in before he decapitated someone. Notice the placement he chose for his smiley face sticker too!
Chris helps some of the girls with their crossword puzzles.
Jen explains the finer points of the flick grip.

14 comments:

Unknown said...

this is awesome! jen, do you have them calling fouls yet??

Chris and Jen said...

Not yet, but we´ve still got 2 days left!

Tom said...

But they must learn high fives! High fives are an essential communication tool! How else do they express solidarity and communal achievement?

Anonymous said...

I agree with Tom! Perhaps you should show the kids the low five and work your way up. Talking about being high, how high is the elevation there? I'm impressed by your dedication to the children.

Chris and Jen said...

We will be sure to work on both the low and high fives tomorrow when we are there. Chris practiced giving "alto cinco" today with some of them. They seem to be catching on!

Chris and Jen said...

Oh, and we think the elevation is about 2000 meters here. You definitely feel it when you´re running around after the kids!

Anonymous said...

Isn't it amazing that kids are kids no matter what language they speak? I see a few who could have been in any of our class pictures.Whether from Brentwood, CI or Arequipa--they all respond to attention. I'm so glad to see that you are doing this. It looks like a fun way to share.
Happy Halloween
Mom

Unknown said...

I can't believe you did this mere days before I arrive in Peru! Oh well, I guess I'll have to settle for throwing a frisbee with the two of you...boring... Any luck rounding up some monkeys to join us?

Unknown said...

......i want video of that

AC said...

awesome blog kids! that pic of ferdando (or as i'm going to call him "crazy sticker face") should be a poster... i'm not sure for what, but it definitely should be a poster. trip looks freakin' awesome and i agree that a drunken monkey ulti game would top it off nicely. WHEN it happens, i'd lay down $5 that says Sassy calls a foul in spanish-monkey language.

Chris and Jen said...

It´s been tough finding monkeys that want to play with us. And they´re all sober too. Maybe at tonight´s Halloween party we´ll have better luck.

Tom said...

they have Halloween? that's crazy!

Anonymous said...

This seems like a lot of work you guys are putting in with the kids down there. I hope you are being paid handsomely (demand USD, don't get fooled on the exchange rates).

Joe and Cara said...

What an amazing way to share with another culture. This is a great program. I'm sitting here at work on a Friday catching up on your blog. Wish I was planning a trip rather then reminiscing about adventures past. Sorry, I am feeling sentimental. I will try and write something funny in future posts.
Love,
Cara