Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Who Are We?


Here is a photo from our Guatemala Fundraiser that took place at Blockheads on Monday July 19th. The event was attended by 50 supporters.
Back Row (l-r) Adam Peacock, Conrad Steinman, Charlotte Smith, Lauren Moon
Front Row (l-r) Joel Arandia, James Sicks, Mary Gazella, Lisa Tilson
missing: Tom Harley

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

It's Not Too Late To Give!

We're off this Saturday, July 24th, to Guatemala, but we still need your support. Every dollar raised means more construction supplies that we can purchase while in Guatemala for the boys' home. No amount is too small (or too large, for that matter!) Please use the PayPal DONATE button on the right, or send a check to:

Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church
Attn: Carole White
7 West 55th Street
New York, NY 10019

In the memo section, please write "NEXT 2010 Guatemala".

Thank You! And stay posted for photos and updates from the trip!

Monday, June 28, 2010

Making a Donation

Please use the Donate button on the right to make donations to our construction fund rather than contributing to the Geber Derek Boy's Ranch directly, as Geber Derek will not otherwise be able to identify the donation as belonging to our group. We are hoping to raise at least the $5,000 minimum requested by Geber Derek and will transfer the money to their PayPal account from ours in a lump sum a few days before departure. Any funds we receive after the trip we will forward on to Geber Derek, but please try to get your donations to us by Monday, July 19th at the latest (preferably by Wednesday, July 14th) in order for there to be time for funds to clear and be available to us while we are in Guatemala.

Alternatively, please mail a check to:
Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church
Attn: Carole White
7 West 55th Street
New York, NY 10019

In the memo section, please write "NEXT 2010 Guatemala".

Please note that Geber Derek and the American Bushido-kai Karate Association (ABKA), the non-profit organization through which they raise funds in the USA, are non-profits registered with the IRS and we will be forwarding all funds on to them. So donations are tax-deductible and we can work with anyone who needs a receipt.

Thank you for your support!

Information provided by Geber Derek concerning the situation in Antigua, Guatemala:

The average salary per family is around $200 a month--$100/adult. This wage is for someone with no formal education working a job cleaning homes, grunt construction work, street sweeper, etc. With an elementary education one can make $150-200/month working a factory. With a high school education, then salary goes up to $300 working as a secretary, various office jobs, computer tech, and such. A college education easily makes $1,000-$6,000/month depending on the task. This of course depends on the actual degree you have upon graduation.

From our experience with the kids that attend Shalom School and the kids we know of in the neighborhood, we commonly work with these figures:

5/10 girls loose virginity before 15 years of age. 90% are through sexual abuse by a step-brother/father, uncle, neighbor, or gang member. (The other 10% are obviously coaxed into it by someone.) 7/10 girls have their first child by the age of 18. By 25 they have 4-5 children from several different men. On average, there are three fathers per family.

The "father" gets the woman pregnant and then leaves her to raise the children by herself. She has to go work and leaves the kids alone at home. They in turn become prime targets for violence, gangs and abuse.

The fathers spend their time drinking medical grade alcohol they get in a small flask for US $0.50. It is enough to keep him in a drunken stupor for 2 days. Their other drug of choice is glue similar to rubber cement. Sniffing a small amount of this deadens the nerves, easies hunger pains, and numbing the cold. Mentally he is still active, but has no feeling. Both of these situations often lead to an awful and painful death.

When the first child born to a 16 or 17-year-old mother turns 13 or 14, the man the mother is living with comes home drunk/drugged and the process repeats itself.

In 2006, there were 71 documented cases at Shalom School of sexual abuse: 21 boys and 50 girls. These are just the ones we knew about. Our guess is that it was just the tip of the iceberg.

Homes on average are 10x10ft shacks made out of rusted tin and 2x4 posts. They have dirt floors and lack running water and sewage. Those homes with space use an outhouse for their needs, otherwise the waste runs through the streets to the bottom of the ravine. For water, families have to bucket it in from a nearby source. Many times that source is from the back of a delivery truck, which charges them 5 times the cost of what someone pays to be connected to municipal water. For electricity, residents must climb up the poll and tap into the high power lines however they can. When it rains, water runs under the walls and across the floor. Food is cooked over an open fire, which many times is not only fueled by wood, but by trash, plastic and anything they can find. Families average 7 kids. Usually there is a grandmother, an aunt, and cousins that live in the house, too. The households average 10-15 occupants per home.

The general target age for gang recruitment is 12 years old. The average gang member lives to be just 24. Gang members are involved in drug dealing, extortion and gang rape. Young boys are drawn to the opportunity to belong to a group, and the promise of power and finances. Once in, the only way out is death.