I returned to
Colombia in 2017, but my heart and mind stayed in Guatemala with its friendly
people, smiles, humility and simplicity, their lives, stories and culture. My
hope was to return someday and continue with the humanitarian work we had
started.
In September of
this year, I started messaging with Franco. I received his invitation to help
with this year's humanitarian campaign. Now, I am back in Sibinal, San Marcos,
Guatemala. I’m happy to be back and share with the host family who adopted me
during my four years of humanitarian work and share with my friends and most of
all, humbled to contribute to the transformation of lives.
Sibinal is a small
beautiful town surrounded by majestic mountains and located between two of the highest
volcanoes in Central America. It is a place with lush landscapes and the people
are hospitable and friendly. Tragically, it is also a place with high levels of
extreme poverty. For four years I closely worked and observed the difficult
living conditions of most families due to a lack of job opportunities and financial
resources.
In the past,
before I left Sibinal to return to Colombia, I occasionally felt I didn’t have
anything else to offer the people living in these communities. In spite of
this, I discovered in the end that one of the most important things in life is
giving my time to serve others. Whoever gives their time is giving part of
their life because time goes by and does not return. Today, this is my way of
saying thank you to a beautiful place that gave me so much.
I would like to
share more about me and what brought me to this point in my life.
I was born in 1985
in Puerto Rico, Colombia, which is a small town in the county of BolĂvar located
in the southern coast of Colombia. I am the second of four siblings. I grew up
in the countryside and spent much of my childhood surrounded by nature and a
feeling of freedom. My father was a farmer and my mother a housewife devoted
entirely to her home, family, and gardening.
Throughout my
early years in school I stayed with my family until 1998. That same year the
violence in Colombia became extremely dangerous. Specifically in the area of
the country where we lived. Suddenly, one day we had to leave our home to
survive the increasing violence between guerrillas and paramilitaries. From
that moment forward my life changed forever. My family constantly took refuge
in different places to survive. My family eventually spread out seeking safety,
we haven´t been reunited again.
During an outing
in 1999, I arrived to a small town in Colombia where it was customary to do
guitar night serenades. It was during this time that I fell in love with this
instrument. Since then, the guitar became my biggest inspiration, passion, and refuge
in the middle of so much violence and uncertainty. I became a self-taught
musician.
After relocating
to different places to survive, I finally arrived to Barranquilla, Colombia in
2005. I settled and began a musical career by playing with different local
bands while doing other side jobs. One day, I received an invitation from a
friend to attend a religious event. I was accepted into this religious
community and played guitar for the choir and in 2013 I participated in an
international exchange program.
Later in 2013, I
arrived to Sibinal, San Marcos, Guatemala to work in two communities, focused
on community development. The main objective was to improve underprivileged communities
and strengthen the economic growth of two cooperatives. This experience
transformed my life completely because when I left Colombia I only had three
semesters of college. However, I used what I had learned in college and gave
the best of myself. I had the wonderful surprise of receiving much more than I
could give. I received love, support, understanding, healing, peace and
harmony.
One of the things
that shocked me the most was the migration phenomenon. Sibinal is only an hour
away from the state of Chiapas, Mexico. It is a route used by migrants from
many countries to reach the US. I was surprised by the number of friends and
acquaintances I would see one day only to find out the next day they had
migrated looking for job opportunities. I analyzed and tried
to understand why people from Sibinal were migrating out of Guatemala and could
not find answers. I thought that perhaps they did not love their home land, but
little by little I understood that the people who were migrating had basic
needs which were not being met.
In 2014, I met my
friend Franco. We both had the idea of creating a humanitarian group in Sibinal,
Guatemala. He had basic knowledge of Guatemala’s history during the 36 years of
armed conflict and the oppression and genocide the Mayan people experienced for
decades. He had also witnessed up close the poverty in many regions of this beautiful
country. After much dialogue with Franco, I talked about our plan with a group
of my closest friends in Sibinal.
In December 2014,
our first humanitarian attempt was the delivery of Christmas gifts for more
than 200 children in a nearby community. The activity was successful and seeing
so much happiness in the children motivated us to do more.
We decided to
focus on developing something that would have a lasting social impact and strengthen
communities. That is how the idea of selecting families living in extreme
poverty originally started. Through donations we would attempt to provide and
meet one family’s basic needs by providing items such as stoves, latrines,
floor, walls, aluminum roofs and even homes.
Since then, team
Project Humanitarian Efforts Lifting the Lives of Others (HELLO) was
established in the US, and team Generacion Magnificat in Guatemala. Every
December since 2014, both teams coordinate fundraisers to meet the basic needs
of individual family’s and provide joy to children in the form of Christmas
gifts.
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