Juanita and Paola speaking with El Garzal community leaders |
This past Saturday, July 19, I traveled out to
the Magdalena Medio region with two colleagues
from Justapaz, Jenny and Angélica. We were looking forward to meeting again
with the community of El Garzal and strategizing with them about how to best
support their ongoing struggle for their land and to visiting the rural
community of El Guayabo for the first time, after having heard about their
struggle from Pastor Salvador in El Garzal and from the Christian Peacemaker Teams.
Delicious stew in the making. |
We were also joined by my wife, Paola, a
physical therapist, and Juanita, a public health educator, both professors in
the health sciences department at Bogotá's Rosario University.
They were there to do some initial research they hope will lead to a project
aimed at improving El Garzal's access to health services. Currently it can take
anywhere from two to eight hours to get to the nearest doctor from El Garzal.
In the afternoon, Jenny, Angélica and I spoke
with the community leaders about the challenges of their case. Up until the
middle of last year we were hopeful that the case was making progress in
Colombia's Rural Development Institute - Incoder, but after a change in
Minister of Agriculture, the Director of Incoder and the Coordinator of
Incoder's Land Management Division, we are back to the drawing boards. The
community, probably better than we do, understands that this is a long and
difficult process and their resoluteness is an inspiration.
Pastor Salvador with pictures |
A special treat on this visit was finally
delivering a bunch of pictures and beautiful picture books [web-based
photo essay/pdf], from M.R. Georgevich, a UCC delegate who
visited El Garzal in 2013. The smiles that lit up the community members' faces
as they found themselves in the pictures were priceless.
Sunday began by saying goodbye to Paola and
Juanita at 5:30 a.m. - on their way back to Bogotá, followed by a 6 a.m.
worship-service at the El Garzal Foursquare Church - in this climate it is best
to beat the heat by getting an early start. After worship and a breakfast of
arepas, scrambled eggs and black coffee, we set out on the hour-long hike to
the edge of the river. There a large canoe with an outboard motor - known here
as a Johnson - awaited to ferry us across the Magdalena River and to the
community of El Guayabo.
As we arrived, the community proudly displayed
their new sign, which told of who they are, "a peasant community defending
their territory", what they believe in, "civility, justice and
peace", and who supports them, numerous organizations including the
Christian Peacemaker Teams.
Sign identifying the El Guayabo peasant community |
We met with the community on the farm where riot
police had shown up last week to evict them. Eventually the eviction failed, as
the community nonviolently resisted. We gathered under a large mango tree to
hear of how they had taken over the land after a previous owner had abandoned
it over thirty years ago. Pastor Abel of the El Guayabo Foursquare Church
joined us and opened the meeting with prayer. We learned that most of the community
attends one of the three churches with services there, the Foursquare Church,
the United Pentecostal Church and the Catholic Church.
A highlight of the meeting was sharing prayers
and messages of support we had received from churches and individuals in the
United States, Mexico and Colombia.
We join with Christian Peacemaker Teams and
their call for urgent action on behalf of El Guayabo.
You can sign a petition to the police inspector here. Please continue to keep both El Garzal and
El Guayabo in your thoughts and prayers.
Saying goodby to El Guayabo |
After spending the night with different families
in El Guayabo, we set out early Monday morning for the three-hour trip back up
the Magdalena River to Barrancabermeja. There we met the Middle
Magdalena Peace and Development Program - led by the Catholic
Diocese of Barrancabermeja and heard their thoughts on how we could best support
the communities of El Garzal, El Guayabo and Las Pavas. Most striking was their
longer and broader view of how all of these land disputes point to a larger
regional dispute between large landowners, in cahoots with neo-paramilitary
groups and drug-trafficking mafias, to push peasants off the land. They
encouraged our continued and deepening involvement on behalf of these peasant
communities.
It's amazing what getting out of forced conscription can do for hair and smiles! |
4 comments:
Latest news!A site that recommended me to a friend. President Juan Manuel Santos announced that a working group coordinated by Foreign Minister Maria Angela Holguin, to work on the issue of opening the border with the neighboring country settle. [url=https://quivo.co/13458-gobierno-toma-medidas-para-solucionar-crisis-en-la-frontera-con-venezuela.html[/url]
Latest news!A site that recommended me to a friend. President Juan Manuel Santos announced that a working group coordinated by Foreign Minister Maria Angela Holguin, to work on the issue of opening the border with the neighboring country settle. https://quivo.co/13458-gobierno-toma-medidas-para-solucionar-crisis-en-la-frontera-con-venezuela.html
Pero la institución le respondió que hasta que no hiciera el cambio de nombre oficial.
El caso ocurrido en el Sena de Barranquilla, se convirtió un hecho importante para la comunidad Lgbti en Colombia, pues sentó un precedente con respecto a los derechos de esta población. https://quivo.co/16366-estudiantes-transgenero-del-sena-podran-usar-cualquier-uniforme.html
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