Hi folks,
As many of you may have noticed I haven't updated in a long while, perhaps three or four weeks, though I've been extremely busy so it hasn't been without reason. This next post will be about my most recent trip to the northern province of Argentina; Misiones. Due to the longevity of the trip, an entire week, I'll devote the next two or three posts to covering the different segments of the trip, the positives and the negatives, what worked and what didn't, the highlights, and of course,
un montón de fotos (a ton of photos).
To begin, the trip was divided up into roughly two parts: The first half we spent in the village working with the community, preparing food, spending time with the children, organizing the clothing drop, and doing lice checks. The second half of the trip was spent in a more touristic atmosphere, seeing Iguazu falls, visiting Ciudad del Este, getting lost in Brazil, and visiting old Jesuit ruins in the town of San Ignacio.
Part One: Peruti
Arriving in the village of Peruti, located in the heart of one of the northernmost provinces of Argentina, is entering a different world in several key ways. First, you are surrounded by what is known as the selva; a thick, dark rainforest jungle that has crept from Brasil and Paraguay and has settled in the northern corner of Argentina. The selva, is thick, it's wet, and the soil is colored a distinct red that will easily stain skin or clothing.
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Misiones province is colored red |
A second fundamental difference is seen in the culture of the people. The inhabitants of Peruti were primarily of Guarani descent, the indigenous tribe that before colonisation inhabited northern Argentina, southern Brasil and Paraguay. The people have kept many of the old customs and Guarani traditions, and still speak Guarani amongst themselves as well as Spanish. In fact, Guarani has inherited many words from Spanish for new words and phrases that didn't exist before in traditional Guarani.
The people themselves live in relative poverty. Access to clean running water is limited and sometimes non-existent. I was surprised to find that the tap I had been using to clean the pots and pans after food preparation stopped supplying water when the rains stopped and the sun came out. Children prefer to run barefoot through the red muddy soil, some unclothed, and the lack of access to food cannot be overemphasized.
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The children line up for the cereal and milk handout |
Recently, the national government just finished a building project in the village, supplying clean homes for families that needed them. While the project has supplied many families with brand new homes, I wonder at the motives for the project. So often the national government, which relies heavily on the poor and unemployed, gives handouts to people in order to ensure votes and stay in power. While I am glad that now many of the children in the village have clean, safe homes to return to every day, I wonder at the motives for the current government, which is currently oversaturated with corruption charges and has been under the spotlight since it took power in 2003.
Having worked for L.I.F.E, the non-profit group that organized the trip, in both the Villas in Buenos Aires and in Peruti village, I must say one of the most impressive differences for me was in the attitudes of the people in the village. It is true that in both the villas and the village the people are gripped by poverty on a daily basis. In both places they grapple with hunger and a hidden future, and most girls don't reach 18 before they've had their first child. Yet the people in the village, in contrast with many people in the villa, had a humbleness to them, an innocence that hadn't been tarnished by proximity to the offerings and enticements of city life, which seems to have had such a negative impact on those living in the villa. Despite the poverty, physical disabilities, lack of food, clothing, and of course lack of luxuries, the people in the village seemed to live contentedly with what they had, perhaps partly because they didn't know what they were missing or perhaps because they didn't know what the outside world had to offer.
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Lice checks with Kaja and Anna |
We spent a total of three days in the village. Our duties included preparing food for the women and children, Preparing the clothing for the women to pick up for their families, doing lice checks, spending time touring the village with the children. For me, one of the highlights I found was the deep well of joy that the people seemed to have. The competitive nature of wanting more, of ambition, seemed non-existent. Perhaps one of the few if only upsides of living in poverty is that you adjust and find contentment in the simplicity of existence at the bare minimum. Perhaps a key to happiness is in maintaining this simple contentment even when you do not live on the margins or live in poverty.
My favorite moments were spent with the children. They showed us their cemetery, a mixed assortment of cross-marked graves a little ways outside the village. Afterwards we walked around the village, seeing it from the children's perspective. This is one of the few places I've seen in recent years where children still play outside. They are not monitored constantly by the parents but run freely, reminding me of my childhood memories of outdoor adventures in Vermont.
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Preparing pan frito for everyone.
A shoutout to the simple pleasures. Que rico! |
On Sunday, our final day in the village, I helped a local Misionero named Nino prepare an asado for the villagers. We began preparation at 10 in the morning and by 3:30 in the afternoon we had cooked a total of 450 chorizos and 90 hamburgers.
I can continue to describe the experience in the village. But I think perhaps pictures can describe better than words the atmosphere and the people. The experience was transforming. To be immersed in such a different culture and way of life gives one a profoundly different worldview. You return to the frenetic, competitive atmosphere of the city with a sense that this culture of wanting more doesn't need to be the only culture we can choose to adopt. I've seen another culture in which those who live simply, even in poverty, can find a deeper and longer-lasting contentment than those living for more.
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Shared memories |
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Chorizo for all |
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El asador and his assistant |
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I wish I had a pet monkey |
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Children at play while I prepare the chorizos |
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Hmmm, just look at those shoes! |
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He just needed to show us his pet bird! |
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To the memories that last |
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And happiness shared |
No matter the circumstances, happiness and contentment can be found if you are willing to see and accept it. That is perhaps the most important lesson I learned from working in Peruti, and one I will always hold close to heart.
Until next time,
Kyle