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Posts Tagged ‘volunteer’

Jubilee Aotearoa

Friday, February 20th, 2009

jubilee
www.debtaction.org.nz

What do they do?
Jubilee Aotearoa is campaigning to cancel the unpayable debt of poor countries and to end the harmful conditions on loans from the international financial institutions including the IMF and World Bank.  It grew out of a meeting of agencies and individuals meeting in 1997 who jointly campaigned for a special one-off effort to mark the millennium in 2000.  Jubilee Aotearoa continues to meet regularly with government to discuss debt related issues, the agendas and programmes of the IMF, World Bank and Asian Development Bank and from time to time organizes campaign actions.

How can I get involved?
Check out the website: www.debtaction.org.nz for more information.  Follow the links to find up-to-date international news on the current situation.

Invite a speaker or borrow resources (DVDs and videos).

Write a letter or ask a question of a political candidate regarding debt.  Jubilee is producing some background material and questions which will be available on the website soon.

Join the email list and attend the meetings with government.  Contact: gillian.southey@cws.org.nz to find out how.

Get Jubilees help to organise a stall, a petition or a local action asking the NZ government to take a stronger stand on debt cancellation.

Habitat for Humanity

Monday, February 16th, 2009

habitat

www.habitat.org.nz

What do they do?
Habitat for Humanity is an international not-for-profit organisation. The ultimate goal of Habitat for Humanity is to eliminate poverty housing and homelessness from the face of the earth by building adequate and basic housing. Habitat for Humanity in New Zealand is a not-for-profit Christian organisation that works in partnership with people of goodwill and families in need, to eliminate sub-standard housing by building and selling simple, decent houses on an affordable basis.

How can I get involved?
Locally:

Volunteering for house builds - There are 11 Habitat for Humanity “affiliates” (branches) throughout New Zealand, from Northland to Invercargill. House builds take place throughout the year, dependent on land availability and building consent.

Assisting with fundraising - Habitat for Humanity encourage individuals and volunteers to come up with innovative and fun ways to work together with the community to raise further funds for their activities. If you would like to run an event or create personal challenges that will raise funds, contact your local affiliate.

Assisting with administration at your local affiliate – Volunteers can help in a range of different ways, not just on the building site! They need people that can assist with fundraising, catering for events, general administration, and all sorts of things. If you have a skill and some time that you think they may be able to make use of, go and check them out – they’d love to see you.

Globally:
Global Village Trips - This is where teams of volunteers visit countries in need and help build houses in the local communities. Global Village teams bring invaluable support to the communities they visit. More homes are built each year because of the donation Global Village teams make to the host community. You do not need prior building experience. If you have a sense of adventure, are in good health and willing to work hard, you can be part of a Global Village team! Participants under the age of 18 must be accompanied by a parent or guardian or be part of an organized school, faith or service group. If you would like to join an existing team as an individual, check out the Global Village Trip Schedule and contact the team leader.

Conservation Volunteers

Wednesday, January 14th, 2009

conservation-vol

www.conservationvolunteers.org.nz


What do they do?

Conservation Volunteers New Zealand is a leading practical conservation organisation. Conservation Volunteers completes more than 100 conservation projects across New Zealand each year.

How can I get involved?

Volunteer! – If you want to help preserve and restore New Zealand’s beautiful environment, this should be your first stop. Projects have included assisting with the ecological restoration of the Hunua Falls, the construction of walking and bike tracks, surveying the endangered Whio (Blue duck) and assisting with maintaining a Kiwi enclosure.

Volunteers come from a wide range of backgrounds, and don’t need any prior skills or experience. You’ll receive the training you need to complete the project you’re working on.

Oxfam

Wednesday, December 3rd, 2008

oxfamvrgreen2highres

www.oxfam.org.nz

What do they do?

Oxfam is a Humanitarian organisation is dedicated to finding lasting solutions to poverty and injustice. Oxfam New Zealand was formed in1991, and has now developed an international reputation for its development work in the Pacific and East Asia, its focus on practical solutions to the emerging crisis in water and sanitation and its campaigning for rights.

How can I get involved?

  • Become an Oxfam campaigner - Campaign activities can range from spending two minutes on an email action through to fronting up to politicians to ask questions about their policies on aid, trade and debt.
  • Trailwalker Challenge - raise $2000 to help to overcome poverty and injustice by tackling 100km of tough NZ terrain
  • The Amazing Race - race other teams through Cambodia, Vietnam and Thailand to raise money for Oxfam projects
  • Oxjam - a month of music with a message. NZ artists busk and throw concerts to raise awareness about Oxfam’s work. They are always looking for volunteers, organisers and fresh ideas and content.
  • ‘Good Books’ and gifts – Buy your books at the online store, and all profits go to Oxfam projects. You can also buy gifts for your friends and family that directly benefit poor communities.
  • Send them stamps – Yup, Oxfam will sort through your old stamps and sell them to collectors!
  • Volunteer – Oxfam are always on the lookout for help with their programmes.
  • Donate to Oxfam
  • Read a Publication – Oxfam produce high quality, up-to-date publications on Poverty and Development issues around the world. Expand your mind and read one today!

A year volunteering in South Africa

Friday, June 27th, 2008

Interview by Tessa Johnstone

felicitygibsonFelicity Gibson, 22, was interested in understanding other countries — not just seeing them through a camera or tour bus window. That’s why she took a year out from her degree to volunteer in South Africa and “gain a new perspective on the world.”

Felicity spent a year volunteering through an initiative organised by New Zealand Aotearoa-based Volunteer Service Abroad (VSA) and University of Otago’s Geography Studies faculty. She worked as a Monitoring and Evaluation Coordinator, based in Students Partnership Worldwide’s (SPW) East London, South Africa office and regularly traveling to communities in the Eastern Cape to support volunteers working in the field.

SPW runs youth empowerment programmes in South Africa, primarily with the Xhosa people, in which local and international volunteers are paired up together and provide health education and awareness, training for job and life skills, help to set up clubs and activities for the community, set up resource and library centres, and facilitate peer education.

Felicity’s job was to go into the communities where the youth empowerment programmes were run, and come up with a good system to look at how the programmes were working for the community and the volunteers.

Youth is an extra bonus groupof4

Volunteering gives you a lot of work experience and job skills, which Felicity points out is invaluable for young people. Young people, as well, offer a lot to the organisations and communities they volunteer with.
“I think being young meant I had the right attitude going in to the experience. Many of the older volunteers I talked to were worried about how they were going to handle the different working environment and lack of resources.
“But because I had very little working experience, I had nothing to compare my job to and so was very adaptable to the environment and willing to give things a try.
“This lack of experience also meant that I did not go in their thinking that there was only one right way to do things and did not try and do every thing my own way. I was happy just to go with the flow and learn from others.
“I think volunteers must be open-minded to the fact that people have different sets of knowledge and be prepared to learn and share. It is very important that volunteers remember that they are there to help, not hinder an organisation.”

Daily life is an experience
Felicity feels lucky to have experienced both life in the South African office and that of her fellow international volunteers working in villages.
“I think all of us international volunteers had very rewarding experiences and each faced challenges unique to our situation. Most importantly we had a lot of fun and a lot of laughs together.”
Felicity lived in a small apartment in East London, but experienced the living conditions of volunteers working in smaller communities as well.
“Living in South Africa was certainly not easy. For example, while we lived in town, we could not leave the house after dark as we had no car and it was too dangerous to walk anywhere.
“In the rural communities, volunteers were placed in rondavels [mud huts] with a host family. Rondavels usually had one room where sleeping, eating and cleaning all occurred.”
All SPW volunteers experience very basic living conditions, often with no running water, though most have some electricity. Travel is done by shared minibus or taxi, which Felicity describes entertainingly as “long bumpy trips crammed with people”. There is no fridge, which limits volunteers to a vegetarian diet which includes a lot of local dishes.

Being the “Young White Girl”
spwvolunteersandypOne of the most difficult challenges for Felicity was adjusting to a different culture in South Africa.
“Things looked and felt like home in South Africa, but I was expected to act differently. For example, no one ever worried about running late. This was always frustrating to me when we were holding an event and I expected to arrive early to set up but everyone always arrived after the event was meant to start as they knew that all the people attending would be even later than that.”
Felicity also observed a lot of racism, which she says was very challenging.
“There is still a lot of cultural division in South Africa and I was amazed at the extremely racist comments dropped casually into a conversation by a taxi driver, waiter or my neighbour. While there are racists in New Zealand, most people hide it. In South Africa, people who were racist were very open about it.”
Some South Africans also had skewed perceptions of Felicity, as a “Young White Girl”.
“People’s perception of white people from overseas had often been formed from the movies and so I gained somewhat of a celebrity status. As there were not often young, white girls walking round where I lived or visited I got stared at and whispered about a lot. Some people thought I had a lot of money and could therefore give them my possessions.
“However, in other settings I could feel there was a lot of trepidation about a young, white girl coming into a community with a fear I was going to tell people how to live their lives.”

The biggest learning?
Felicity says the biggest learning for her was “the most obvious”.
“I learnt about how people with little money and resources live and how hard it is for people without opportunities, like I have had, to move forward in their lives.
“Take, for example, computers. You can go to a community and many people have never seen a computer. You may then go to a township where there might be ten old computers for a school of 800 pupils. Then you might find young university students who use computers as part of their school work, however because they have never had the opportunity to use them like we do, their skills are still very low. And then you get the minority at the top that a live life like we do here in New Zealand where using a computer is an everyday occurrence. This range extends to all parts of life, with the minority at the top gaining all the experience and education and more able to take advantage of opportunities than those at the other end of the scale.”

Coming home - with new perspectives and confidence

outsideworkshopFelicity got what she wanted in a travel experience, gaining insight into what South Africa was really like.
“I was very scared of travelling to South Africa because of the horror stories I’d heard. But the country I discovered was very different to those preconceptions. For the most, everyone in South Africa was so friendly and positive. I found it quite a shock to return to New Zealand which I had always thought of as being laidback to find that I now see us as quite a melancholy country. I also learnt about the many different cultures that make up South Africa, especially the Xhosa people.”
Felicity says she came back from South Africa a more mature person.
“Throughout the year I faced so many challenges that I am really quite a different person to the one I used to be. I have a very different perspective on the world and view things in different ways. I definitely am a lot more grateful for the life I live and therefore am more determined to make the most of what I have.”
Eric Levine, founder of SPW and long-time volunteer himself, says the experience also gives you a huge amount of confidence.
“Volunteers always tell me: I came thinking I was going to teach and I learned and took away much more than I taught’,” Eric says.
“They come away with confidence times 10 to a factor of 100 — to work in difficult, under-resourced, complicated situations and be successful in change — no matter what you do in your life, people constantly are like, I am capable, I have skills, I can figure out how to do stuff’.

Felicity is back at Otago completing her Geography degree in Development Studies, though she’s not sure what will happen after that.
“I definitely believe that I was very lucky to be born in New Zealand, and that gives me a sense of social responsibility to help others who were not so lucky, whether they are from developing countries or in New Zealand itself.”
spwtshirts
To find out more about Students Partnership Worldwide (SPW), who are working with Volunteer Service Abroad (VSA) to place New Zealanders aged 18 — 28 in volunteer placements for six to nine months in Southern Africa, or the VSA/Otago University Univol programme, go to www.vsa.org.nz or www.spw.org.

The top photo shows Felicity with fellow SPW volunteer Greer Lamaro carrying water up from the stream in the village. All other photos courtesy of SPW volunteer training.


TAKE ACTION!

Want to volunteer, but not sure how to go about it ethically? Download VSA’s Volunteering Overseas Guide (1.6MB) or check out the ethical volunteering site for things to think about and tips on how to find a good organisation. And you can download Dev-Zone’s magazine, Just Change Issue 11: Good Intentions - The Ethics of Volunteering.


LEARN MORE:

South Africa country profile
Xhosa entry on wikipedia
http://allafrica.com/ news from Africa.

    What we can do for peace

    Wednesday, October 11th, 2006

    Compiled by Youth at the Disarmament and Security Centre, Otautahi, Christchurch, NZ

    lotus flowerDespite all the negative issues there are also increasingly positive steps that people the world over that are beginning to take to make changes for Peace, to live in harmony with the Earth and amongst all peoples.

    • Believe in your power to create change.
    • We are all vital links in the interconnected web of life, what we do today can make a positive difference.
    • Understand that dominant worldviews don’t always enable other people’s voices and stories to be heard. History books may be biased according to whoever wrote them.
    • Challenge yourself and others to support peace and justice and to hold these concepts at the centre of all local, national and international decision—making processes.
    • Think about the sort of world you would like your children’s children’s children to live in and work towards that!
    • Brainstorm ideas for positive change. Just as all destructive acts are acts of war, all creative acts are acts of peace.
    • Take time out to enjoy yourself, your community and your environment.

    doves

    TAKE ACTION!

    • Find out more information on peace issues. Knowledge is power!
    • Share what you learn with friends and family.
    • Respect differences, honour diversity, learn more about another culture in your community.
    • Storytelling. Our world is made up of stories- not just atoms! Learn other people’s stories and those of your family.
    • Use the media. Write an article for a community or school newspaper. Get TV or radio interviews.
    • Find out angles that may be missing from mainstream media by consulting alternative media sources.
    • Learn more about the South Pacific Nuclear-Free zone. Push for a world without nuclear weapons and nuclear power plants.
    • Start your own group.
    • Consume less. Support conservation campaigns. Recycle, reuse and repair.
    • Practice solving conflict peacefully in your own life.
    • Avoid buying products from multinational companies.
    • Get involved in your local community. Become a volunteer.
    • Hold a stall or information display at a festival or in a public place.
    • Screen-print information or posters and distribute around friends, the community and the city.
    • Print patches or T- shirts, or wear ones others have made.
    • Write letters to decision makers.
    • Design and paint posters, banners or placards.
    • Take part in a Non-violent Direct Action (it is important to know your rights and take precaution to ensure your safety and the safety of others, remember that you are promoting peace so act PEACEFULLY)
    • Create and/or participate in Street Theatre.

    people peace sign
    LEARN MORE

    • Check out current events online at: www.indymedia.com or www.guerillanews.com
    • Find out about local groups who work for peace and justice. Support groups that campaign for Peace nationally and internationally.
    • Check out Greenpeace and Amnesty International
    • Check out www.getactive.org.nz This site contains all you need to know about setting up and managing your own social or environmental campaigns.
    • Go to the Disarmament and Security Centre . It has heaps of good resources for learning about the history of NZ’s peace movement, and its anti-nuclear movement.
    • Use your consumer power to make wise decisions when buying things (buy products made in your own country, products that have minimal or no packaging, think about who made it and how they were treated, think about the impacts to communities and the environment that may incur from making the product, using the product and discarding the product). Check out adbusters
    • Grow food, help out at a local community garden. Find out what foods in Genetically Modified and what are healthier options.
    • Understand economic globalisation and its impact on people and the environment.
    • Visit the Peace Foundation Aotearoa NZ. The Peace Foundation is a 30-year old NGO that works through on Education, Action and Research.

    Change doesn’t lie in the hands of governments but in ours.

    Dressed to kill

    Friday, October 6th, 2006

    Hannah Newport

    Excited doesn’t begin to describe how Jimmy’s feeling right now. He’s holding those pants like their God’s greatest gift, and he aint lettin’ go. “Thanks Mum!” he cries. “I mean, um, cheers… you can go now.”
    clothes hanging
    Little Jimmy thinks that the snaz new pair of Dickies his adoring mother has just purchased is going to solve all his problems. He truly believes. Finally no more spit-ball sandwiches from those dastardly 6th formers. No more childish treatment from the aloof and awe-inspiring 7th formers and certainly no more sickening pity from the teachers. Who knows, the girl with the pretty pig tails from science class might even smile at him.

    Jimmy may be deluding himself just a little, but how many of us do the same thing? How many of us feel our adolescent problems solved by the power of a logo or a look’? A bit of retail therapy will calm our self-conscious nerves! We’ll happily pay the price for a branded t-shirt if it’s going to help us fit in with the crowd. We’re hooked on sweet, sticky conformism, and boy does it taste good.

    But while expensive items tailor our “personal look” (to be like with everyone else’s), and boost young Jimmy’s cred, what do they really mean? Even those of us less creatively dressed are judged on our appearance. So what are your clothes saying about you? And what’s the true story behind the labels we love?

    More often than one would like to believe, the clothes we buy in NZ were made in a factory where the conditions are hard and workers are not allowed to bargain collectively in unions. And many of the workers are teenagers. There’s a vague awareness of this among teenagers, but it’s just not a priority when it has no noticeably direct impact on our own lives.

    So, things look rather unenthusiastic for the ethics of tomorrow. Or do they? Hidden among the wonderful sea of apathetic youth are the odd students who break the stereotype; they’re actually thinking about life, the universe, and clothes. They’re few and far between, but so are red M & M’s.
    susie harcourt
    “I’ve never wanted Chuck Tailors,” says one such rule-breaking individual. Susie Harcourt, a Wellington 7th former tells sweatshops where to go, on a regular basis. She’s been working as a volunteer at Trade Aid for more than a year now, and yes, she knows a thing or two about this and that.
    trade aid logo
    “I’d say teens are more materialistic than ever,” she says. “And also there’s more material to be materialistic about. People do have money, children do have money, and the advertising is more than ever before.”

    “We see groups of 8 girls who have little variations, but mainly looked just the same. And with girls it’s more obvious, but then you look at boys as well; you think about it, and you look at it properly, and it’s like- you all look exactly the same!” Aha, so it’s about being part of the crowd. We are all in danger of letting the right label or “look” take over our own sense of identity or, even more frighteningly, our sense of morals.

    Decades ago now, many NZ stores, including Glassons and Hallensteins, stopped printing “Made In New Zealand” on their labels as they began to manufacture overseas instead. It doesn’t take a genius to work out this was cost motivated. Profit won out over supporting local products (and therefore employment) and ignored the environmental damage caused by international transportation.

    Enter individual number two. When it comes to matters of an un-conformist nature, Stephanie Cairns (best known as the keyboardist from rock quest band “Cybersex on Mars”). has got an opinion all right.
    stephanie cairns
    “People are just lazy,” she says. “They’re easily brainwashed and they’re easily persuaded. When you see a cheap shirt that you like, you want to buy it, because it’s cheap.”

    Most people avoid thinking about the conditions the clothes they buy were made in. “A lot of people are aware of it, but they sort of feel that it’s not their position to do anything about it.”

    And often, it’s not even as clear cut as knowing about it or not. There’s this whole other grey area, where un-conformist and “cool” overlap. “Fashion isn’t just about clothes, it’s often about ideas. The fashion when I started a high school was to buy organic food, buy fair trade shoes, things like that. But then when it went out, suddenly a lot of people who cared about that stuff suddenly stopped caring about it because it went out of fashion.”
    pile of clothes
    “It’s sort of like when those wristbands that came out that said, “Make Poverty History” on them and they were made by sweatshop labour,” remembers Stephanie. “People do have this thing on the surface, where they want to be seen as having a social conscience, want to be seen as standing up for things. They want to be seen to be “good people”, basically. But that doesn’t extend into the way they live their lives.”
    no sweat sneakers
    It could be a little daunting, for a first-time freethinker: How do I show that I care, without showing that I want to show I care? Bit of a paradox. Perhaps the key is just playing a common-sense game of “match the pair”, between the issues that you care about, and the manner in which you support them. Is buying a candy cane from New World really going to help dentistry in the Middle East?

    The ultimate hypocrisy, both young women agree, is the use of Guevara’s image in popular culture. “Have you seen my t-shirt that says, “Che Guevara is not a fashion accessory?” asks Stephanie.

    “People think they’re being so revolutionary by wearing this image on this t-shirt, but they don’t even know what it means,” agrees Stephanie. These clothes or items that are sold to us, in countries like NZ, have been made in sweatshops.

    “Che Guevara was working for a world where people weren’t oppressed like that, and didn’t have to work for someone else’s profit. It’s sort of like this phoney radicalism. Just the fact that they’re wearing it on a t-shirt; it’s the most hypocritical thing, and nobody realises.”

    We’ve hit the nail on the head. Sure, it is ironic that in our efforts to “fit in” we’ve ended up looking like clone teens. But the ultimate irony can be found in the manufactured ideas, which we buy into with each purchase, then sell on again when the fad ends.

    For a few though, it’s frustration at this hypocrisy that sparks alternative antics. Nothing drastic, just little variations to keep the sanity. For Susie, it’s her volunteer shift at Trade Aid. Steph, on the other hand, vents her individuality on a sewing machine. “There’s lots of reason for making your own clothes. Number one is that it’s just cheaper. Basically, I’m a poor student, so it’s the best thing. And another reason is basically you’re not taking part in the whole capitalist machine. If you’re doing your own thing and making your own clothes then you’re not taking part in the cycle of exploitation.”
    sewing machine
    Whether it’s taking to fabric with a pair of scissors, or carving your own style through donating time to a cause, it’s about expressing yourself; stepping away from the clothes that “everyone” wears and from what they represent.

    And while the masses are dressed to kill, these individuals among us question. What they’re finding out is not altogether comforting; a profiteer you’ve never met has made some very personal decisions for you; decisions about the shoes on your feet and the way of the world. But after all, hasn’t it always just taken a few individuals to lead the way to change?

    Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed people can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has.” Margaret Mead

    LEARN MORE

    Trade Aid
    No Sweat Apparel American company No Sweat says it “defines the market for goods that support independent trade unions - the only historically proven solution to sweatshops”.
    The Fair Trade Foundation (UK)
    The Good Shopping Guide (UK)
    www.ethicalconsumer.org
    Make Poverty History in NZ
    global issues magazine
    Global Issues magazine 15 (July 2005) “Trade: A Fair Journey?”

    fabric
    An interesting article on the web about things being made in China called “A Life Without China” . It’s about New Zealand-based reporter Mandy Herrick who renounces Chinese-made goods for a month to reveal the depths of our growing dependence on the mega-factory of the world.

    TAKE ACTION!

    • Make your own clothes
    • Volunteer your time, eg at Trade Aid
    • Find out more about your own jeans brand, or Google where your t-shirt was made
    • Write to your favourite shop and tell them you love their stuff but want it to be fairly traded
    • Go op-shopping / buy second-hand stuff

    Photos of Susie and Stpehanie by Hannah Newport.

    Tanzania time

    Monday, October 10th, 2005

    Gidday everyone,

    It has been a few weeks, but now I feel like I have almost adjusted to Tanzania Time.

    Oh, some of you have asked what I am actually doing here? So I’ll drop some hints.

    I am working with a conservation based community organisation. Everyone is a volunteer; I am the only mzungu (white) actually working for them, but there are a few others doing research and other bits and pieces.


    Tim with Maasai Elders

    The main purpose of my assignment here is to develop an environmental education programme, as well as building the capacity of the organisation to continue what they are up to and to assist with developing the ability of women and children to create better incomes.


    Children at Maasai Ceremony to where boys and men pass on to the next stage of life; from boyhood to warrior-hood to elder-hood, this occurs once every 10 to 14 years.

    I am also providing advice to help a Maasai cultural tourism initiative who provides some funding for the development work we do. I am also working very closely with Istituto Oikos, an Italian ecology based NGO, who are well established and funded…

    There was a big storm a week or so ago week which actually brought snow….

    My girls

    Wednesday, September 21st, 2005

    Mariana Gledhill from Wellington, N.Z. spent 7 months, in 2005, in Peru doing voluntary work. She shares her experiences.

    Hi All

    Well, no one won the election bigtime. I am sorry I was so hard on New Zealand… it just seems like a world away now. It really does. So do uni strikes and all of that.

    Sometimes I do not want to go home, I just feel so settled here. I have been working with my girls more and getting closer to them. The more I do, the harder the thought of leaving is getting. Best I leave now I think. We sing together, and I help them more with their homework… the number of kids in increasing. There are now 80 including 2 3 month old babies. Lots of work.

    Some of the girls have brothers who live in Ica, which is 1 a half hours from Chincha. I went with them on a visit. It was wonderful meeting their brothers and some of their parents. Ricardina has 2 brothers in Ica and I have never seem her looking so happy. Brigitte was just so pleased to see her brother that the stuck to each other like glue. I meet Cinthia’´s mum… I have heard so much about you, she said. It makes me pleased to know that I am doing some good. I teach Englsih like a mad thing right now, and the kids confide in me alot now… more than the tutoras. I help the little ones a lot with their work, and have to punish them when they are bad. I hate doing that.

    I have been sick again (another bloddy flu). I had a flu in my first and last weeks of work… there is an epidemic in my work. 13 kids are bedridden right now. It is quite a lot of work…

    My last day is 24 of Sept

    I do not want to leave

    See you all later

    Love Mariana

    Volunteering: an enriching experience

    Monday, September 12th, 2005

    Mariana Gledhill from Wellington, N.Z. spent 7 months, in 2005, in Peru doing voluntary work. She shares her experiences.

    Hi All

    I am back and Chincha and glad of it. It was wonderful to see all of my family and friends again. I cannot believe that I only have a month left.

    Sometimes, I do not want to return to New Zealand. I just don’´t understand the mentality of the people anymore. They think that life is tough if they cannot buy a new CD player… I used to understand but now I do not. I feel sorry for people who cannot earn enough money to eat, and for people who have to resort to bathing in open drains, and for people who live in the middle of a desert where there are dust storms, where there is little water and where the houses are made of mats woven from flax. My outlook on the world has changed completely. My country seems better, richer but at the same time, poorer. There is a quote that explains it: Richness comes from appreciating what you have. I think NZ has the richness, but it lacking in the appreciation, thus it might as well not have the richness.

    Oh and I have heard that there are strikes at uni, one day strikes. I burst out laughing when I read about that. The universities here are on strikes too… but the thing is, they do strikes properly . The national universities have not been open for classes for 2 months.

    Being back at work and seeing my kids again has been wonderful. Now I am torn between travelling and spending my remaining time with them. They have been without a doubt, the most wonderful part of my experience. No exchange is easy, but each time I have felt sad, my girls have cheered my up! They give me unconditional love, the best support that anyone can recieve. When I came here, I was an unknown person to them and now I am the mother of them. I have had many enquiries about what the kids need and what donations can be sent. Well, now my father is coming to Peru for a few days and he can take a certain amount of stuff with him. Clothes, pencils, exercise books, colouring books, toys… I cannot think of anything that would not be useful there but please, nothing of excessive weight. Donations can be sent to my house (19 Versailles St. Karori) if anyone has anything that they do not need that would benefit kids of the age 4 months to 18 years. Dad will take as much as he can with him.

    I went to a huge parade in Paracas to celebrate a battle that they had there. It was amazing. There were Chileans and Argentines there and they were acting like they were friends with the Peruvians. The flags of the three countries were flying together. Usually, Peruvians claim to hate them. But they have San Martin (who helped make Latin America politically independent from Spain) in common so they march around and drink pisco together… even if only for a day. There were funny moments. Some Peruvian guy thought that I was a Chilean (yawhat!!!! I speak like a gringa and Chilean women are much more gorgeous and well groomed than me!!!!) and a completely toasted Argentine tried to come on to me (I tried not to laugh the whole time. It was really difficult!!!) But yeah, it was a very interesting time. There was marching and lots of speeches. Then there was dancing… God I am going to miss the dancing. I read this quote the other day that is just too true.

    In Latin America not only can the men dance but they can dance darned well, now that is culture shock!

    Anyway, think I have written enough already

    all of you take care

    Love Mariana