July 31, 2024

Education Rules!

And we couldn’t do it without you.

GHA’s ongoing projects and accomplishments…..so far in 2024

  • Preescolar:  Preschool classrooms in 4 communities

    Without this kind of headstart, statistics warn that 1/2 of indigenous youth will fail 1st grade and only 30% will finish 3rd grade.

  • Refuerzo escolar:  Tutoring for students struggling with academics

           With the immense pressure that poverty exerts on students and with students whose parents are themselves often illiterate, extra help is essential to success.




  • Talleres para becados:  Enrichment studies for scholarship students..       Offering our students fresh perspectives

    Subjects have included such things as social inclusion, human rights, theater,  art   reproduction, and computer skills  




  • Becas:  Scholarships for 54 students this year, 10 at university level

    A HUGE Bravo, here.

  • Talleres para padres:   Workshops for the parents of our students

    with such diverse studies as citizenship (how to vote, advocate, define legal  

    and human rights) crafts, nutrition, finances, poultry raising, gardening and food dehydration.

  • Stoves! :  10 vented stoves built this season

    conserving wood while protecting families from smoke inhalation and burns

  • Staff development/continuing education:

    classes in teaching literacy to excite students, and optional classes in English

  • Water filter distribution to over 1500 families.








We at GHA thank YOU for the opportunity to convert your donations into direct action.








June 2024 Motivated to Learn

Motivated to Learn

Students are now two monthsinto their first semester of 2024 in Guatemala.   This year GHA is supporting 54 students with scholarships, including 10 at university level.




Additionally, our 4 preschool classrooms are joyful and exciting places, offering kids creative outlets while preparing them for primary school.  Without this kind of headstart, statistics warn that 1/2 of indigenous youth will fail 1st grade and only 30% will finish 3rd grade.

GHA’s tutoring workshops—-refuerzos—-offer help to 60 students weekly, support needed particularly after the disruption to education due to covid.    Computer education is being offered for two of our classes of 7-9 year olds.    

These lovely women are our extraordinary staff.    An important offshoot of our education program is offering continuing education for our teachers.   They are motivated learners.  Young and college educated, they are strong and empowered, leaders in their communities.  We are exceedingly proud of them.

10 families have received wood-conserving, vented Onil stoves, due to one generous advised donation.   These will replace unvented fires which cause respiratory problems and often burns and blindness.   Conserving wood not only helps keep the hillsides anchored with trees, but also saves considerable labor or cost for the family.

What’s more…..

——We continue extracurricular workshops for our scholarship students and for their mothers.   The moms are busy with chicken husbandry, food dehydration, and exploring mental health issues.







—-Our staff has again coordinated with Water4Life to distribute waterfilters in the community.  This effort has benefitted nearly 1500 homes to date.







—-Our teachers continue learning compelling approaches to teaching literacy with the guidance of ChildAid, another wonderful nonprofit located around the lake.







We at GHA thank YOU for the opportunity to convert your donations into direct action.







Some of our Littles graduating in November

You can sponsor a student through our website with either a monthy or annual donation.   It costs only $25/month to sponsor primary through secondary level students, and $84/month ($1000/yr) for university students.   Along with tuition and supplies, our students receive both mentoring and enrichment studies, and their mom’s, too, have the opportunity to expand their horizons with classes.

On behalf of all those who have benefited from this work, we thank our donors, our partners, who have made this possible.  

As from its inception, the founding family pays all overhead costs so all other contributions directly fund our programs.

GHA is a 501c3 nonprofit

DONATE

2024 School Year Begins

Guatemala’s School Year Begins

The Guatemalan school year will soon commence, and GHA staff is busy

preparing for new scholarship students and old.   We have supported many of our students for years through all levels of education, and have also provided them workshops through which they can explore subjects beyond academics.  Two more of our students are due to graduate from university this year, a really monumental feat for indigenous youth, and donor money is truly what has provided this opportunity for them.Education at this level has the potential of empowering not just single families, but entire indigenous communities, both economically and politically.

  An additional preschool class has been added to GHA’s schedule for 2024, bringing the total to 4.  We also have 6 tutoring classes that students attend for individualized help in any subject that they’re finding challenging.  With 10 students in each class, we now have 100 students, preschool to high school, being guided weekly.

Moms learning crochet

The Mother’s School…Escuela de Madres…continues this year in the 4 communities in which we work on the south side of Lago de Atitlan.    In addition to crafts, in these workshops women are exposed to thought provoking topics, such as civil and paternal rights, diversity, nutrition, and reproduction.  When workshops reconvene in February, the topic all month will be ‘Migration’.  This is a vastly important concern in these communities from which many, often deeply impoverished, migrate to the US.

Above…one of the Mother’s groups





The laying of cement floors over dirt continues, a boon to family health and pride.  To date GHA has laid 168 floors (those in addition to the 47 houses we built pre-Covid).  And

continuing projects include chicken husbandry and solar dehydrating.





We at GHA thank YOU for the opportunity to convert your donations into direct action.





Lago de Atitlan

Spring trip 2023

April 2023

I’ve recently returned from Guatemala and our projects aroung Lake Atitlan.  The days were comfortably in the 70’s, with fog moving into the caldera in the evenings, precursers to the start of the rainy season there at 5200’.



On day 1 we met with and shared a meal with our whole team of social workers and educators and worked on a SWOT (Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats) analysis of the nonprofit.  This was an enlightening exercise.  Since Covid, GHA has largely directed our assets to education rather than towards building single-family homes.  

As inflation has soared, indigenous Guatemalan families struggle for mere survival, and education often has to take a backseat as children join the workforce ever earlier.   The major threat we see as an organization is dropouts and emigration to the U.S.     Weaknesses the team discussed included all the travel by tuk tuk required of working in four communities (we see no alternative!) and the currrent financial inability for offering tutoring classes twice weekly rather than once.   We have excellent teachers, all part-time, and parents, recognizing the benefits of individualized tutoring, are asking for more.

I visited two of the turoring classes.   GHA has coordinated with another nonprofit to educate our own teachers in exciting models for presenting literacy.  On this day, the kids were hearing and participating in the telling of Jack and the Beanstalk (Juan y Los Frijoles Magicos).  The teacher’s motions were animated, her enthusiasm exciting the kids, drawing them out with questions.   This is a far cry from what is normal in under-funded, rote, non-participitory education in Guatemala.   These kids were revved up!  Some of these kids may never have the opportunity to finish even grade school.   We desparately want them to be literate before they need stop.

GHA presents Escuelas de Madres in our several towns, and I was very impressed observing one in Pasajquim.   The ride there, switchbacking up and out of the ancient volcanic caldera that cradles the lake, is about an hour and a half long, on a good day.   Pasajquim is at the end of the road.   Only twice over the years have I seen a brief glimpse of the Pacific as the the fog rolls in daily.   Here many families have chosen to have their even young children work on foot looms for an outside company rather than continue in school.   School is legally compulsory through grade school, but a blind eye is turned towards the indigenous.






We offer workshops for the mothers of the kids for whom we privide scholarships.   They’ve chosen to study many things:  human/legal rights to soap making, sex ed/anatomy to weaving.   The current topic might be called ‘self respect’.   These women, living in a deeply patriarchal society are just now, according to their own telling, becoming aware that they are worthy and valuable.   They are given the rare opportuntiy to socialize in a group.   These incredible women, many single and illiterate, tell us with pride of their children, whose educations we support.   A few have kids at university level.   These students are likely to raise generations out of poverty.

This year GHA provides scholarships for 45 students.   11 are at university level, studying nursing, business administration, social work, architecture and education.

Additionally we have darn cute new pre-school classes where kids get a head start, get read to, and hone their Spanish skills before entering public school if they speak only Tz’utujil.


We had lunch in a mom's home; hot-from-the-comal tortillas and veggies.  She and several other moms showed us their chickens. This was a very successful project GHA presented to the moms starting a couple years ago. Each woman was gifted 5 chicks, but not until they were taught to care for them, had made enclosures, and learned the business of selling. Many now have multiplied their flocks many times, earned well, have eggs and meat for their families. It's been a wonderfully sustainable project.







We’d like to express gratitude to Spain’s Universidad de Valencia for sponsoring interns to share in our work year after year, and this season sending us lovely and competent Sara.







All in all it was a great trip, both heartwarming and invigorating.

(above:   Tuk Tuks on the streets of San Pedro La Laguna)

You can sponsor a student through our website with either a monthy or annual donation.   It costs only $25/month to sponsor primary through secondary level students, and $84/month ($1000/yr) for university students.   Along with tuition and supplies, our students receive both mentoring and enrichment studies, and their mom’s, too, have the opportunity to expand their horizons with classes.

August 2022

August 2022 Adelantando

The school year in Guatemala began in January, and this year we are sponsoring 58 students, 10 at university level. Since GHA’s inception 5 students have completed their college studies, including our beloved and competent Project Director, Maria Madai Yojcom Cruz, who earned her degree in Social Work after 10 years of GHA sponsorship. We couldn’t be more proud, and Madai couldn’t be a better advocate for her community.

Since the pandemic, much of GHA’s time, energy and funding has gone towards ‘refuerzos’, tutoring, for the primary age kids who have missed so much in-class learning and didn’t have books or computers to keep up with class expectations. We have tutoring centers now in each of the 4 communities in which we work. The lovely women pictured above are GHA’s enthusiastic teachers, along with our Director, Madai (second from right), and GHA’s Social Worker, Cecilia Amarilas Batz Bizarro (second from left). These dedicated teachers glean inspiration from Montessori models while GHA sponsors continuing education workshops for them.

Our Escuela de Madres, Mothers’ School, has had resounding success bringing the mom’s of our scholarship students access to classes of their own choosing. Over these last two years these have included such diverse studies as citizenship (how to vote, advocate, legal and human rights), crafts, nutrition, finances, poultry raising and community gardening for both home use and profit.

GHA, with it’s intimate knowledge of local communities, has partnered with Water4Life International to distribute hundreds of water filters.

And GHA continues laying down cement floors over dirt, despite prices for building materials, like most goods and food, having risen pronouncedly.

You can sponsor a student through our website with either a monthy or annual donation. It costs only $25/month to sponsor primary through secondary level students, and $84/month ($1000/yr) for university students. Along with tuition and supplies, our students receive both mentoring and enrichment studies, and their mom’s, too, have the opportunity to expand their horizons with classes.

On behalf of all those who have benefited from this work, we thank our donors, our partners, who have made this possible.

2021 ....10 year update!



10 years!!! GHA celebrated its 10th year as a nonprofit in October, supporting the educational and housing needs of indigenous communities in Guatemala’s highlands.

While in 2020 our attention and finances were necessarily diverted to pandemic related humanitarian aid, by January of this year, 2021, we were back to our primary missions.

Only in recent months have vaccines started becoming available, and distribution has been unequal. Solola, the Department in which GHA works, is 98% indigenous Maya and has had little access. Schools have been open only sporadically, and students, without books or computers, have struggled to keep up. In response, this year GHA created tutoring centers in 4 communities. The students whose education GHA sponsors, as well as many others in these towns, now receive individualized attention using the Montessori model.

This year our mothers’ workshops expanded to include both communal and private vegetable gardens. Besides providing needed nutrition, the women can grow enough to market to better support their families.

GHA is again replacing dirt floors in homes with cement. This has a dramatic effect, and has a relatively minor cost, on average less than $200 per house. According to a World Bank study, a cement floor reduces parasites in the home by 78%, diarrhea by 49%, anemia by 81%. Children’s cognitive development improves by 36-98% as the child is no longer competing with parasites for energy.

So, now, 10 years in GHA has accomplished a lot. With the help of our donors we have:

  • Built 47 homes

  • Laid 151 floors in otherwise serviceable homes. Now we’re aiming to lay one per week.

  • Replaced 45 roofs

  • Built 2 classrooms and painted or rehabbed multiple community buildings

  • Sponsored the education of students: 72 this year alone, 12 of whom are in college.

  • Offered both enrichment classes and tutoring to those students

  • Started a uke-based music program

  • Created Vacation School for 100+ kids annually…now on hold with Covid

  • Taught beading to a group of women to help generate income for their families. (These can be ordered online from Mexicali Blues, a fine supporter of GHA.)

  • Created workshops for moms, where they can explore topics they themselves choose, like nutrition, legal rights, sanitation, and crafts. And gardens!!

  • Supplied humanitarian aid early in the pandemic...1340 parcels of food, each to feed a family for 2 weeks.

  • Twice coordinated with Water 4 Life Global to distribute water filters to hundreds of homes.

On behalf of all those who have benefited from this work, we thank our donors, our partners, who have made this possible.





An exciting year in review

At 8 years old, GHA is steady and strong, expanding upon our education mission while continuing our construction program.  Our superb local staff, Director Maria Madai Yojcom and Social Worker Cecy Batz Bizarro, serve the most pressing needs of their communities.

GHA has a deep commitment to education and now offers weekly workshops to the mothers of GHA's 56 scholarship students.   The mothers suggest the topics and GHA finds teachers.   Workshops have included legal rights, nutrition, crafts, STDs, and entrepreneurship. These workshops are enthusiatically received.  We were pleased to receive a grant from American Women for International Understanding to help support this empowering initiative.   

In October we invited our 15 university scholarhip students to a celebratory dinner.  These students and their families have overcome huge challenges to reach this level while the average indigenous child in Guatemala attends school only 2.5 years.   We are exceedingly proud of these young people, and terribly thankful for our donors who support them.   You should know that by doing so, generations of a family will likely rise beyond poverty.

For our sponsored students we offer enrichment workshops with topics such as ecology, recycling, photography, family planning and diversity.   We offer and require tutoring for any of our students who are struggling, as well as Spanish language classes for children entering school who hear only Tz’utujil spoken at home.   And in November GHA produced our 4th annual Vacation School in remote Pasajquim, offering 100 kids classes in art, music, science, sports, crafts and more during their summer break…..and, importantly, a healthy meal each day.

 

We continue to build ecologically sustainable homes for families whose homes were unsafe, unstable and unsecure (46 homes to date) while improving stable homes by laying cement floors over dirt (138 to date) and leaking lamina roofs with new (45).   Safe housing in which good hygiene can be maintained is essential to the welfare of a family. According to UC Berkeley’s Center of Evaluation for Global Action, replacing dirt floors with cement results in 13% less diarrhea and a 20% reduction of anemia.  Consequently, toddlers score 30% higher on language and communication skills.   

As from the beginning, the five founding siblings pay all overhead costs, including staffing, office expenditures and our own transportation.   

Every penny from donors directly funds one of our projects.   We welcome you to partner with us in these efforts.   


Volunteer Experiences

if you’re thinking about working or volunteering with GHA, read this post written by our Fundraising and Development Intern to get a feel of what working with us is like!

Working with GHA has been a lot of fun and definitely taught me a lot. Although I primarily work on grants, fundraising, and running the social media accounts, I have also gotten a chance to see the construction and education programs in action. In my time here I have learned how to clean cane for building with bajareque and gotten to attend a taller for the children of Pasajquim. I love how GHA gets up close and personal with the people they are helping. As someone with a degree in international development and experience working with other NGOs, I have seen different strategies and programs, and in my opinion GHA’s is one of the best. Every family we work with really gets to know and form a relationship with the staff members who are here in San Juan. The work environment is flexible and laid back (just like most things in Guatemala) and has provided me with an overall great experience! 

IMG_1913.JPG.jpeg

Progress!

An update:   Our co-op building model has been working wonderfully well.   Groups of 3 families unite to labor together to build 3 homes and that has constituted their entire investment in the homes.   We are just finishing our 31st home, the last 11 having been bajareque.  

We have attempted to entirely get away from using cement in our builds, as it's production is onerous to the planet, but we've yet to find a good alternative for the floors.   We continue to experiment with different natural options that don't require expensive (unattainable) upkeep.

This year we are supporting 65 students, 7 of whom are in college...a fantastic achievement for them.  

All of our students have the benefit of enrichment classes from GHA, and students (native T'zutujil speakers) who struggle with Spanish are tutored.   We have seen marked improvement and success for these kids.

Our Music classes are also in full swing in Pasajquim.

We are grateful to Mexicali Blues for their support.   The Maine based retailer with a  vibrant online presence is marketing the bracelets that the women of Pasajquim are making, and donating 100% of the sale (!) to GHA.   The bracelets are the product of workshops that GHA organized for that under-served community. To check them out, click here!

 

Bittersweet

Almu....a director in the truest sense.  Thank you.

We want to acknowledge the wealth or work thatAlmudena Villario Martinez has done over the last couple of years as Director of GHA. Her innovation has expended the organization's scope, her godwill and cheer in the community has won the hearts of many, and her work has benefitted so many families. We are grateful and fortunate to have had her. Now, as Almu moves on to another adventure, we are joined by Patricia Macias Lopez as Directora. Patricia has several years of nonprofit experience in Guatemala and we are excited that she has chosen to work with us.

July 2016...sustainability and community

We have tried to build for the poorest of the poor, while being sure that they have a significant investment in their homes.   Previously our families paid 25% of the cost of their homes over 5 years with no interest...it averaged about $8/month.   And that was still too burdensome a commitment for some.    Now we have begun a 'labor cooperative'.   A family is required to send a representative to work on 3 homes, and that alone becomes their equity in their home.  

Currently we are building the 2nd of the 3 homes with our first group of families and all is going wonderfully well.   Since these are truly impoverished families, GHA helps out by providing a quintal (100#) of corn for strength.   The families are excited and their dedication to the work reflects that.   

 

In our march towards sustainability, we continue with bajareque (wattle and daub) building, but now using cypress instead of bamboo.   The bamboo is absolutely beautiful but may leave the families with a burden of pest control.   

hard situations for these families....hard to keep your kids safe and healthy

hard situations for these families....hard to keep your kids safe and healthy

new home....happy, secure, healthier family 

new home....happy, secure, healthier family

 

Building this way is quite a bit more expensive for GHA.   We very much felt the need to build with as little cement as possible, as it's production is such a detriment to the environment.   But this new style costs 50% more to build, plus we are receiving no monetary contributions from the families.   But we are PROUD of both the process and the new co-op, which forges new relationships in the community.

This is an audio recording made by a spectacular GHA volunteer, Morgana.   It was created a couple houses back, as we were working on our first bamboo bajareque home

Progress

Well, its obvious that social media isn't my strong point.   BUT, in fact, GHA has done a terrific amount of work since our first, the last, blog.   

We have focused a lot of energy into Pasajquim.   As of today, we have built 4 homes there and 2 classrooms.  In the spring of 2014 we inaugurated a uke-based music program which has been an incredible success.    This was what our fundraiser looked like:  https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/ukes-and-music-to-pasajquim   

Now about 400 kids have music lessons weekly....and some small groups have been asked to play at events in other communities.   I'd love for us to be able to expand this to include those children who, for economic necessity, can no longer stay in school.   And to the many, many interested adults.

We also started a beading workshop for single, unemployed mothers in this community.   20 women have been tutored to begin a co-op, now selling their wares through a couple of organizations with roots in the US.   Should you want to help support this, GHA is happy to take wholesale orders...you can contact our Director, Almudena at avillarino2036@hotmail.com.

A GHA alliance with the worthy non-profit Centro Maya now makes available unprecedented access to therapy for handicapped children in Pasajquim.   And GHA funders have stocked the town's small clinic with medical supplies and essential antibiotics.

Other work in this town included a 'Vacation School'.   Traditionally, when the school year ends in October, even the library closes.   We coordinated and funded a program so each morning kids could come do handicrafts, take music, art and science lessons and receive a much needed meal.  Daily enrollment was high

 

We have also moved more of our attention to San Pablo La Laguna.   To date we have laid nearly 100 floors there to alleviate much of the suffering that comes from constant contact with parasites.   I wish you could see the pride of ownership, as a dirt floored home gets a makeover.

The school year in Guatemala begins in January and this year we have been able to offer many more scholarships.   Most of the new recipients are in San Pablo and Pasajquim.   The latter doesn't have a high school, so if children want to continue their studies their costs include not only school fees and materials, but also transportation, food and lodging.   

We had a group from the US building a home for the family in SanPablo.  That was be GHA's 17th homebuild.  Through donor generosity, this family's situation will become more safe, healthy and easy.   Below  is the home being replaced, though it barely shows that the wall behind the cornstalks is caving in and the roof is a sieve.

c casa 8.jpg

Today the door and windows will be installed in our 19th and 20th homes, also built in San Pablo.   These homes replace an absolutely decrepit, tiny home a family of 8 had rented for 14 years, sleeping on the floors dirt or mud.

So here we are, still a small non-profit, stretching our resources to accomplish some important projects, always finding ways to ally ourselves with other good local orgs, and always welcoming the donations and assistance of friends.   Thank you, thank you.