“Then little children
were being brought to him in order that he might lay his hands on them and
pray. The disciples spoke sternly to those who brought them; but Jesus said,
‘Let the little children come to me, and do not stop them; for it is to such as
these that the kingdom of heaven belongs.’” – Matthew 19:13-14
Today, I took a break from my usual group in Batey Hata de
Mana and traveled to the barrio with the self described “Team Awesome.” Whereas
the bateys are located in rural areas, the barrios are small neighborhoods in
the urban areas. The locals describe them as ghettoes, where the urban poor
live, work, and raise their families. For the past three days, Team Awesome has
been working in Barrio Juan P. Duarte.
When we drove into the barrio in the yellow school bus, I
joked that there was enough trash on the ground for it to be a landfill. As a
city planner, I was disheartened to find out that Barrio Duarte was actually
built on an old landfill, thus explaining the ever-present trash. All I could
think about was that if Greenwood’s Mayor Carolyn McAdams were with us, she
would have organized a cleanup campaign so fast it would have made the
residents’ heads spin.
The first half of the day, I helped with Vacation Bible
School at the school located next to the work site. We went to each classroom
and read the story of Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden to the kids, in
Spanish, from the children’s Bible. In two of the classrooms, I got to read to
the kids. It was an awesome experience reading a Bible story in a foreign
language to kids who completely understood what I was saying, even though I
didn’t know what the words I was reading meant. The Lord moves in mysterious
ways.
After reading the story to the kids, we helped them with an
arts and crafts activity, making paper serpents with stickers and crayons. The
kids loved every minute of it. At the end of each lesson, the kids sang a song
to us in Spanish, and we returned the favor by singing a song to them in
English. The cultural exchange between old and young, American and Dominican,
was absolutely remarkable.
After VBS, we joined the construction crew and helped them
make progress on their water filtration system. We moved piles of rock, sifted
sand from gravel, carried buckets of mortar, and dug footings for concrete
walls. And all the while, we had a great time in the Caribbean sun, enjoying
each other’s company, and helping make the lives of the people who live in the
barrio a little bit better.
One of my favorite moments from the day was when we were
moving concrete blocks from one side of the wall to the other, a group of local
kids came up to talk to us. Earlier in the day, we had been talking about the
lack of OSHA work site standards with the exposed rebar protruding from the
cinder block walls. As the kids approached us, I reached down and picked up a
plastic bottle, showed it to the kids, placed it upside-down on top of one of
the pieces of rebar, and then pointed to the adjacent field.
The kids looked at each other with a look of excitement, and
ran out into the field to retrieve plastic bottles. They returned within five
minutes, each with an armload of bottles, and then proceeded to make our work
site OSHA approved by placing the bottles on the rebar. They were so happy to
be helpful to our crew!
At the end of the day, we had accomplished a lot and the
team was satisfied with the progress that was made. Although I will be
re-joining my team in Batey Hata de Mana tomorrow, I will always remember the
kids of Barrio Duarte and the love they had for our group of VBS teachers. Little
ones to him belong, indeed.
Click here to see today's photos on Flickr.
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