Portals Project: Mexico & Honduras

Catalyst Traveler, Stefano Mangini has developed an insightful project that connects children to far off places and cultures and also allows them to see the beauty and uniqueness of their own spaces…all through the magic of photography…

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Stefano worked with DGYG over the course of several months to develop a workshop to teach youth how to create a “Portal”, his signature visual books. 30 photos to tell a story.

 

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He tirelessly worked to raise funds to get new cameras for each location that he visited with the plan to lead a workshop. 35 cameras were purchased and donated to five distinct local community organizations throughout Latin America.

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Here are the first three Portals that were created by youth in collaboration with Stefano:

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Portal: La Casa de Las Nubes, Guanajuato

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Portal: El Porvenir

 

And if you are enjoying these photo essays and would like a look at one created by Stefano himself, check out this one on Lucha Libre in Mexico…

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If you are interested in participating in Portals, join DGYG today. You can create a Portal, lead a Portals youth workshop or bring Portals the presentation to a community or classroom along your journey!

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La Casa De Las Nubes: The House of Clouds…

La Casa de las Nubes: A space where we can dream of something better…in a place that could all blow away tomorrow. 

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This morning I woke up contemplating development work and the laughable attachment we have with an “interaction-based” version of sustainability in situations of great need and instability. Sometimes the question, “Is it sustainable?”, is not easily answered nor perhaps the most important question to be asking… What can we learn and gain from situations, efforts and experiences that inherently cannot be long-lasting? As someone that dedicates a fair amount of her time, energy, heart and brain to working in developing communities and supporting programs that look to create a positive impact, the word sustainable is both friend and foe. We all want to SEE concrete, results-based outcomes of the work we do. It must be human nature. However, we are also reinforced on a societal level to produce this and to work in this manner. My concern is that “sustainability” as a concept has become fashionable and trendy…and therefore the underpinnings of what makes something sustainable or not have become muddled by the masses. And that is dangerous…

I also feel very deeply that we must have a psychological attachment to the concept. Because life and work and EVERYTHING has the potential to change, in an instant. So the idea that as change-makers, that we can impart something that has lasting relevancy is like putting a dog in the doorway of a butcher shop! We are literally drooling after the idea of being able to do this, to achieve this. But then…there is our reality. For those of us in the field, daily working with real people, with serious challenges on a community and often systemic level, its like we watch the butcher carry all the bones out the back door, so close we can smell them…but they are literally in someone else’s hands. The clash can be debilitating actually.  At some point we have to decide; do we hang on to this longing…desperately trying to strategize how to get the bones, or do we turn around and face what is within our reach. Do we focus all energy on trying to understand our surroundings in this very moment and be as present and available to that reality as possible? We aren’t sure what the results will be. We are caught between the mindset of a larger picture, a future and….yummmmm results – and a space that can only deal with RIGHT NOW. So do we walk away because we are uncertain of how things will play out, of whether or not the effort will impart a positive impact? Or do we stay? Do we do it anyway, thoughtfully…and carefully but without any promise of meaty, delicious fruits of our labor…or proof that we did something meaningful?

This is where I my brain is this morning… And La Casa de Las Nubes is largely to blame. I know this is a long blog post, I apologize, but I do think it’s worth the read. Below you will learn about this complex and amazing community that Do Good as You Go works with in central Mexico. It is dynamic and challenging and full of amazing people…and there is yet there is no guarantee that it won’t disappear and dissolve back into the city at some point.

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La Casa De Las Nubes is a community driven project that seeks support from individuals and groups that can bring educational and skill-based workshops to the youth and adults that live in the un-registered zone of Guanajuato. The people of this community refer to the zone as Los Angeles, but the rest of the city refers to them as the “squatters settlement” on the mountain top just beyond the colonia La Venada.

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It would take years of investigation and thoughtful interviewing across the class and educational divide to understand Mexico’s land rights and the historical and societal role of “campamentos paracaidistas”, un-registered zones that are occupied until the land is legally their own. So for the purposes of this blog, we will sum it for you as best we can…in a couple of paragraphs.

Although global economic analysis has nothing but positive things to say about how Mexico is moving forward and competing in a global market. The reality is that the job market for Mexican’s is in a terrible state. Even college educated and highly trained individuals are forced to accept wages that are just above minimum wage. Therefore working class and uneducated workforce are in a dire situation, where the minimum wage is far below what the basic cost of living requires. Obviously, Mexico continues to be a very difficult environment for the poor and lower middle class. Many people live in grave poverty in the heart of Mexican urban areas, they cannot afford to rent or buy a home, they barely can afford to feed their families and keep their children in school.

Throughout history many of the neighborhoods that we encounter today in cities like Mexico City, Guadalajara, Oaxaca, and Guanajuato in our case…actually came to be formed “organically” through the process of an un-registered and unplanned settlement of people. These settlements range from fifty families to thousands of households. Each municipality has jurisdiction over these areas and will in the end decide to give the people titles to the land that they have inhabited after a period of years (determined by the local government). People live without running water and electricity in homes made of entirely recycled materials, yet are usually located within what appears to be a bustling and thriving urban center with a large population of middle class and upper class inhabitants.

If and when the settlement gains the recognition and registration by the local government, the process only begins there. Usually all costs for the development of shared walkways, streets, drainage systems and access to city water supply is shared between the city and the residents. The most common dynamic is that the city supplies the materials needed and the community is responsible for the building of all structural needs. It can take years for the community to gain access to services like electricity and water.

There are many aspects of this type of development that cause problems for those wishing to create change in a more systemic and progressive manner. The obvious complaints are the lack of concern for public safety and environmental affects of residential construction. Other societal ramifications are the concentration of poverty creating “slums” that even as they develop physically they continue to produce the same cultural problems, like high rates of alcohol and drug abuse, unemployment, teen pregnancy and domestic violence as well as delinquency and the presence of gang activity.

Why are we working here?

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About Los Angeles: there are currently 146 households that comprise the community high up on the hill bordering the north side of the city. They have been there for nine years now. The community boasts an entire generation of youth that were born into this space and know no other home. The people live a very challenging existence because of the terrain, the lack of access to water and the tumultuous cultural dynamics of poverty. But they have incredible spirit and the children are full of life, curiosity and an insatiable desire to learn. The children attend local public schools along-side the neighboring community’s youth. Some of the young adults of Los Angeles are attending the University of Guanajuato. It is apparent that there are many families that strive to provide their children with hope for a better future and they see education as the foundation of that hope becoming a reality.

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Many of our families are single-parent households that honestly do not feel that there is another viable living situation for them. We recognize that this is a reality for many families throughout the city of Guanajuato and even the Republic of Mexico. They are truly fighting to survive and feel abandoned or outside of the benefits of organized society and government, regardless of whether they are living in the settlement or trying to rent a space somewhere in the city. We know that they need a system of support on many levels and hope to help them foster this among themselves and connect them to people that can guide them through difficult situations.

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Celebración del día de las madres en “Los Angeles” barrio de Guanajuato

We are working here because we believe that every child deserves the chance to succeed at learning, to connect positively to their peers and to live in an environment where they are not in danger. La Casa de Las Nubes, has been built from nothing, by the community and volunteers with the collective dream that educational and creativity-building workshops and get-togethers will help to develop community relationships and foster a positive environment with values that will support the youth in finding a path that leads them towards pursuing their dreams.

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Currently in the fall of 2016 we are happy to be offering the community yoga, photography, math, literacy, homework support, English and philosophy to the youth as well as individualized support meetings for families. We are always looking to connect the community to more educational workshops and opportunities.

“They were completely and totally engaged in the activities we had planned, and even the most resistant troublemakers had turned around to be enthusiastic participants. There is so much human capital to be found within these kids – so much intelligence, so much imagination, so much kindness, so much enthusiasm and creativity – and it would be such a terrible waste should it all be lost due to lack of opportunity. I have talked to the other volunteers- these kids, with their smiles, and their hard work,  their generosity with their love – breathe life into us.”  – DGYG Volunteer Saya Des Marais

If you are coming to Guanajuato and would like to support existing programming or provide something new, please Join Do Good as You Go Today to learn more about how you can get involved.

Celebrate World Photo Day with Portals Project!

Today is World Photo Day! Every photo tells a story… In celebration of what photography brings to our lives and how it shapes our worldview, we share with all of you our latest international Photo-based project…Portals.

Portals Project is spearheaded by DGYG volunteer, Stefano Mangini who will be embarking on his great Pan American Journey at the end of this month!

We are so excited that with his enthusiasm and dedication we aim to raise enough funds to provide 5-7 of our partner organizations with new camera equipment! This will mean new cameras in the hands of 50-70 young photographers.

This is only the half of it…. the workshop itself is going to be a wonderfully unique and empowering experience for the youth. Through viewing the Portals projects previously created by Stefano, they will see and hear first-hand accounts about rare and far off places throughout the globe. They will learn from his personal story, starting off in a small, isolated village of less than 5000 people in Italy to living and working in big, amazing cities like New York, Hong Kong and San Francisco, and making solo journeys like this one and others where he ventured from China to Italy…

Then they will learn some basic composition skills and tactics to think “visually” and communicate ideas through images. Collectively they will create a Portal about a place they find meaningful and with a story to be told…

We are so excited to provide these tools, the experience and the connection to this individual artist/traveler….and then to see what they create!

Please SUPPORT us in this effort! Learn more here on the campaign….

Meet Stefano here in his video about why he wants to bring Portals to our communities:

A Classroom with a View!

Don and Carole Nelson traveled all the way to Guanajuato from their home in Canada in a very unique mode of transport….

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Don and Carole, like all of our Catalyst Travelers (Horizons Unlimited) are traveling via motorcycle. But this lovely couple are the only ones we have met to do so in a Ural – a Russian sidecar motorcycle!

They made it all the way to Guanajuato to help us deploy our first attempt of the KA Lite platform with the Raspberry Pi acting as the server. They connected with the local community that is still unrecognized by local government and authorities. It consists of 140 households, all living without the commodities of running water, electricity paved roads and callejones (alleyways) that the official “colonias” of the city count on.

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The community is located just within city limits, only up the mountain as high as one can reach. This is only one of the hidden treasures of this place that is plagued with such serious challenges….the view! To learn about the others, you will just have to come visit us and Do Good with us here in Guanajuato! 

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Don and Carole worked with Do Good As You Go (DGYG) staff (myself and Elvis) to install and train the on-site educators and volunteers, as well as do a test run with some of the youth and adult returning students.

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There we sat high up on the mountain that surrounds the city…creating a fishbowl effect when you are in the “thick” of it. We set up the mobile classroom in La Casa de Las Nubes with help from a local community leader, Chabe. Within 10 minutes everyone was logged on to the KA Lite platform, setting up their virtual classrooms and student profiles. Within 20 minutes they were watching the videos and connecting to this world of educational content….all in Spanish, offline and yet right there in the palm of their hands – 4000+ videos spanning math, science, business, computer programming and humanities!

It was surreal and exciting to be surfing through this content while sitting in the open air, feeling the wind pick up as it does in the evening, and watching the sun make its way towards the horizon.

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To learn more about Don and Carole’s time in Guanajuato and Mexico, read more here.

If you want to Do Good as You Go on your next trip, learn more about our network and our mission by visiting our website . If you are anxious to get started or are already on the road, Get Involved Today!

Ay Mujer! Technology, education and collaboration

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Did you know that 1 in every 2 women in Mexico will have suffered some type of abuse by the time they reach adulthood? Or that one million teenage girls become pregnant each year? 

Mexico has a healthcare system that provides free family planning and a free well woman exam each year. Birth control is available, sex ed has become a part of gradeschool and middle school public education, yet the lives of women in this country have not changed nearly enough over the past few decades.

What is happening here? How can we fight against these numbers?

DGYG volunteers: Alison, Nancy and Meredith are all interested in these issues and want to be involved in an effort to improve the lives of young women in Mexico through access and education. They have teamed up with Katie Clancy in Guanajuato, GTO Mexico to develop an app geared to put these young ladies in the driver seat of their health, their sexuality and their lives. With the support of AppMakr, Ay Mujer! hopes to be all the basic health information women need answers about, right in the comfort (and privacy) of their own hands. It will also address rights, infringements of those rights and how to protect and defend them. A comprehensive map will be created to connect women to access to all the things they are in search of, ie. OBGYN, family planning, free birth control, STD testing, psychological and legal support for those in abusive situations. Lastly Ay Mujer! will have a private forum available to all members to share situations, ask and give advice to others.

Photo Above: DGYG volunteer, Nancy did a wonderful job presenting to the young women in Guanajuato, she is currently in Oaxaca planning the second focus group of moms.

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CamionArte: 3 Days Left to Help Build a Mobile Library! Learn More….

CamionArte-A Classroom on Wheels! 


We are excited to announce that CamionArte, a Classroom on Wheels, now has its mobile-library up and running! Celebrate with us and learn all about the expansion of this amazing program.
3 Days Left! Join our Indiegogo campaign to help build the mobile library. Support this growing program and spread the word to get us to our goal!


What is CamionArte?
CamionArte (“Art Truck”) is a collaboration between Do Good As You Go and Colectivo TAN 473 to bring a library, educational programming and creative exploration to youth in under-served communities in Guanajuato, Mexico.
On a weekly basis, CamionArte visits and provides programming for roughly 70 children, concentrating on three groups of teens and children. This after-school enrichment programming complements regular schooling and aims to encourage discovery, learning and literacy. Read on to learn more about the real-life benefits and impact of this creative program.

Learn About CamionArte!


We hope to expand our reach, one community at a time! We are working on building up the digital component of our mobile classroom AND stocking it up with wonderful books for the kids-to not only instill a love of reading but to help develop cognitive abilities and emotional intelligence.

Would you like to support the CamionArte Library?  Here are some ways:
$5 – Book. One book added to the CamiónArte library!

$25 – Library Supporter!  This donation will help us purchase books (print & digital) for the CamiónArte.

$80 – Tank of gas. One tank of gas for our book mobile! The book mobile is typically filled up every 2 weeks.

$125  Kindle.  We hope to purchase up to 12 Kindles! Each Kindle enables us to build our digital library, expand our group sizes and bring up-to-date educational programming, such as Khan Academy, to the kids.

$400 – Mind in the Making (book set). Mind in the Making is a complete book set that offers seven different life skills: focus and self-control, perspective-taking, communicating, making connections, critical thinking, taking on challenges, and self-directed engaged learning.


Support CamionArte-3 More Days Left to Go!

Spread the word!  Help expand our reach by forwarding or sharing our newsletter!


Select The Muskoka Foundation as your charity of choice with Amazon Smile. A small percentage of each Amazon.com purchase will be directly donated to us, at no cost to you.

Give a Gift that Keeps on Giving!

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Give a Gift that Keeps on Giving!

Today is #GivingTuesday!  Join this amazing movement of giving to great causes this holiday season. Do Good As You Go is excited to share three wonderful opportunities to give gifts that keep giving….Education!

These are unique opportunities for you to support our local organizations and their communities, and join in the efforts to offer the Global Photography Program (India), access the amazing educational programming of Khan Academy/KA Lite (Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras and Colombia) and create a mobile children’s library (Mexico). Please read below and consider giving a gift to one of these great projects!


The Global Photography Program is one of our most popular programs, which has touchedthe lives and developed the artistic skills of many of the workshop participants. We plan to significantly expand this program in the upcoming year, with the first stop in India!  We currently have a volunteer eager to start workshops at the The Children’s College, run bythe Pipal Tree organization in Bangalore, India- with your help we can make it happen! By donating cameras and equipment, we can expand this successful program to India, and increase volunteer opportunities for our travelers! Read more about theprogram here.

Support the Global Photography Program!


 

To make a donation of $160 via Paypal for a camera/Photography Program development click here


Just the size of a credit card!
The powerful Raspberry Pi will enable us to spread the

KA Lite Program.


 

Volunteers Jenn and Witt Sparks, working in partnership with the Foundation for Learning Equality, have been instrumental in bringing the Khan Academy/KA Lite learning curricula, to several of our partner organizations in US and Canada. To continue this success, we plan to bring this amazing educational program to five of our partners in Latin America in the upcoming year!

Getting Khan Academy videos to our partners will be easier than ever with the help of theRaspberry Pi!  This low-cost computer is capable of everything a desktop computer can do, at only about the size of a credit card! The small size and low-cost makes the Raspberry Pi an ideal vehicle for bringing KA Lite programming to our partners, acting as a server and allowing our partners to use their existing setup to access KA Lite’s thousands of educational videos.

Join in and help us bring this program to Latin America!  The Raspberry Pi Model B+ can be purchased for as little as $35 and will help our volunteers bring world-class education tothe youth and communities of our partners. Read more about the initiative here.

Donate a Raspberry Pi!

To make a donation of $35 via Paypal for the Raspberry Pi B+/KA Lite Program development click here.

CamionArte-Classroom on Wheels in Guanajuato, Mexico

The Project CamionArte has become a great collaboration between Do Good As You Goand our local partner in Mexico, Colectivo TAN 473. Classroom on Wheels, a mobile classroom, has brought great enrichment programming to undeserved groups of youth and has helped realize community-based arts projects in marginalized neighborhoods around Guanajuato.

Currently the mobile classroom has been outfitted with permanent shelves to carry 300+ books to the children and families of communities, who have little access to viable literary programs in their schools or the money to purchase books. With Kindles and downloaded children’s books, we will be able to expand the Classroom on Wheels library with varied ability and themed books, encouraging learning in an area where many school-aged children are barely reading at all. With your support, we can unlock a new world of learning for these children! 

Help Build A Mobile Library!

To make a donation of $99 via Paypal for a Kindle/Mobile Library development click here.


Do Good this Giving Tuesday
Help Us Check Off Items on Our Wishlist!


 

 

 


Donate


 

Learn Spanish, Ride Bikes & Make an Impact on an Amazing Community!

Do Good As You Go volunteers, Ashley and Richard from Desk to Glory, hit the big city!

Learn Spanish, ride bikes and
make an impact on an amazing community!

In this issue…

  • Out on the road: Great tips on what to do in Mexico City.
  • Fresh from the field: Current volunteer opportunities in Guatemala.
  • Collaboration is key: Meet our new partner – A fantastic place to study Spanish while volunteering in Guanajuato!

 


Out On the Road
“Let’s Go to the Big City and Ride Bikes!”


 

Attention Overlanders & Travelers!
Take a break from life on the road in close quarters and venture into Mexico City… enjoy the buzz of urban life on two wheels instead of four.

Mexico City is often not on the list of places to visit for Overlanders since no one delights in the idea of driving their rig into the big city. Parking outside the city and using public transportation isthe way to go!  Check out this to-do list, from Richard and Ashley of Desk to Glory, for hitting up Mexico City…including amazing coffee, gorditas, murals and renting a bicycle for the afternoon!


Fresh From the Field 


 

Nurses, Doctors, PR People, Social Media Gurus…Next Stop Guatemala!

This month we are highlighting volunteer opportunities unique to our partner organization in Guatemala. Please email us today if you are interested in these positions:info@themuskokafoundation.org

Mayan Families is a fantastic partner organization located in Panajachel, Guatemala. Theorganization has been around for 10 years, providing opportunities and assistance to theindigenous and impoverished people around Lake Atitlán, through education and community development programs.

Featured volunteer opportunities: 

The Family Aid Program There is a great need for support from medical professionals onsite. Donations of medicine and medical equipment are always welcomed and appreciated.

Help Spread the World Mayan Families provides many services to thousands of community members all through grassroots support. They are always in need of great communicators to help them connect to potential and existing supporters/donors..use your PR skills to impact a local community during your travels!


Collaboration is Key


 

Featured DGYG Partner: NEW! Escuela Falcon in Guanajuato, Mexico

Do Good As You Go is excited to announce our new partnership with the Escuela Falcon language school in Guanajuato, Mexico. With over 20 years of experience teaching Spanish as a foreign language, theschool has an amazing staff of qualified and experienced teachers that will have you speaking Spanish in no time at all!

At Escuela Falcon, the classes are small, theschedules are flexible, and the learning focus is personalized. Students have the opportunity to participate in guided cultural experiences each week, ranging from cooking classes to museum visits…and even salsa dancing!

Do Good As You Go volunteers will receive an extra 15% discount for group or private Spanish classes when they mention their involvement with the Muskoka Foundation. Additionally, Escuela Falcon will waive the registration fee ($30 USD) for volunteers who opt for long term packages of 2 months or more.

For more information about Escuela Falcon, please visit their website at www.escuelafalcon.com or contact their Director of Programs, Renee Davies atinfo@escuelafalcon.com.

Discounts cannot be combined with other promotions or for Skype classes.