There is no bus service in Las Lomitas, but
that doesn’t mean that there can’t be a bus stop right? This was putting
community-based initiative in projects to the test. After weeks of working with
the Guy’s Group to identify a project that they truly wanted without any
outside input, it came down to a “caseta” or what we would call a bus stop. A
basic place that people can sit out of the elements and wait (for whatever that
might be: a friend, an empty truck giving rides, or a bug passing by.)
The guys then nailed down a design
that they made and figured out how to reach their $500 budget. We wanted to do
it all with Honduran funds, but how? The guys ended up saving about $100 of
their own, which was a great start. From there, two of them went to the owner
of the local hardware to discuss the project with him, which landed a $100
donation, and talking to a local rich land owner another $100 came in. However,
the moment of truth came when they went to meet with the mayor.
Two boys from the top of the hill in
the middle of nowhere went with me and the pastor for a ride to the county
seat, Santa Cruz de Yojoa. Bouncing in the Suzuki on the ride in, we prayed
with them, coached them and tried to raise their confidence level. It is not
every day that some muchacho from Podunk, Honduras goes to talk to the most
powerful man in the surrounding area. I had called in advance, so the mayor
came out of his office personally to bring in the boys, which silently shuffled
in. After formalities, the mayor looked a Naun and Andres and said, ”Well,
then?”
Naun says,“We, uh, uhm, we would
like to, uhm, present you, uhm, with a-“
“Take it easy cousin.” Says the
mayor reassuring him. “We’re all friends here. Take a breath and explain what
it is you would like to tell me. You’re okay.”
With those few words of compassion,
the mayor acknowledged the young man’s courage and multiplied it ten-fold. The
hardest step of the project had passed and the most important moment in the
year process from planning to completion. The two young men who walked out of
the mayor’s office with a $200 donation, were not comparable to the two nervous
boys who walked in. They were confident. They had stared fear in the face for
their community and arrived back home with victory in their hearts.
It is not every day that a Honduran
pastor helps lead a project knowing it will probably be used by the town
addicts from time-to-time. He has showed the community that he cares about all
of them. This project has inspired a rare confidence in the guys. Last year, we
needed a full month to figure out one project. This year’s planning session
yielded eight solid projects in 15 minutes. That is development. The leftover
materials from this project were used by these same teenage guys, with no input
from our part, to build a pila with the pastor for a single mother. The
leftover sand was donated to a poor family in the midst of trying to install a
concrete floor. That is why we are here. That is development. The town’s
liabilities have become their most valuable asset, and the love of Christ is
made strong.
This is so great!! God is moving for sure in Las Lomitas. So excited!!
ReplyDeleteAnita