
Our day began with tostada francesa, French toast, along with a thin 
slice of ham, watermelon, papaya, and orange juice. And coffee, of 
course. We only arrived Friday, and yet it feels like we’ve been here 
longer than that.
Now that we have had a couple of days to settle
 in, see a bit of the country, and meet some people in the diocese, it 
is time to get to work.

When we arrive at Iglesia San José de la 
Montaña, Padre Marcos leads us in a devotion from a small booklet, with 
his daughter Abigail translating again. It was the story of a woman who,
 when she started making bread herself, seeing how the yeast works 
through the dough and how the dough transforms into bread, started to 
understand more what Jesus meant when he said, “I am the bread of life.”
 Padre Marcos invited anyone to look at the booklet to share the 
devotion any day this week, encouraged us to rest anytime in the 
sanctuary, take time to talk to anyone with Abigail’s help translating, 
and to feel at home as we are all the family of God. He introduced us to
 the women who would be cooking for us, three people helping from a 
government program called Vida Mejor, “Better Life,” and the man in 
charge of the construction project. After a closing prayer we got 
started.

Some people helped clear rubble and debris from where 
the expanded floor would go. Some demolished the old stove. Some started
 framing the new fence and roof. Some began to build the two new 
ecological stoves. Our team helped where and when we could, carrying 
things, holding things, wielding sledgehammer or pick axe, washing 
windows, reading to and playing with the kids, or getting out of the 
way.

I asked the cooks if they would like some help in the 
kitchen, and they let me attempt to make flour tortillas, slapping the 
dough between my hands. My tortillas were oblong, too thin in the 
middle, and prone to folding up on the way from one hand to the other, 
but María S., director of the tortillería, fixed them for me. Luz showed
 me how to form the tortillas on a circle of plastic on a cutting board 
instead, and that was much easier. These tortillas became baleadas for 
the workers’ breakfasts.
Later I helped with the corn tortillas 
for lunch, shaping the masa, a corn dough, into small balls that María 
flattened between plastic in a metal press. For a while I sat watching, 
chatting with Maricela about the lives of pastors’ and teachers’ wives. 
Among other things, I learned that until recently she and Padre Marcos 
worked with an AIDS program through the Episcopal church. They 
administer HIV tests and provide psychological support to those who test
 positive.

Those working outside saw the neighborhood children 
walking home from school in their uniforms, white polo shirts and navy 
pants or pleated skirts for the morning school, gray pants and skirts in
 the afternoon. None of the students looked older than eight or nine; it
 is expensive to go to school. They also saw the neighborhood trash 
pickup. Everyone piles their trash at the corner by the church. Three 
men load all the bags on the truck, and then unload bag by bag at the 
dump.
There were a lot of people and not much space, so folks 
took time to talk with one another here and there. Some of us chatted 
with Abigail.

Abigail is eighteen and has graduated from a 
bilingual school. She is registered to start college in Tegucigalpa, 
where she plans to study medicine. When she was a little girl, her aunt 
gave her a toy doctor kit that she loved to play with, and she has 
wanted to be a doctor ever since. She would like to be a pediatrician, 
possibly specializing in neonatology, or maybe she will be a 
neurosurgeon. If she becomes a pediatrician, she would love to start a 
hospital to serve poor children. She’s also interested in serving with 
Doctors Without Borders. AND she learned how to knit today (some of the 
other kids gave it a try, too), and has a guitar and wants to learn to 
play. I asked her to bring it tomorrow…

When she was in tenth 
grade, Abigail had an opportunity to spend fifteen days in the U.S., 
living with a host family in D.C., attending St. Andrews Episcopal 
School in Maryland, and visiting museums and other places. She was born 
in Paraiso, lived a few years in Puerto Cortés where her brother Keller 
was born, then the family moved here to San Pedro. Twelve-year-old 
Keller is interested in architecture and maybe engineering. Kenan is the
 family’s little dog.
<<Marcy>> 
 
Thank you !
ReplyDelete