Wednesday, August 5, 2015

Celebration

Our final visit to Cantón Virginia was so full we didn't have time to be sad until it was over.  We had prepared for the community celebration by making decorations;

the Pastoral Team helped us purchased four huge piñatas and candy to fill them, along with the trinkets we had brought from home.  There were cookies and drinks for all and we were hoping for a big turn out!
The first order of business upon our arrival was a final meeting with the Virginia Directiva.  Directiva and delegation members both expressed the profound effect our relationship has for them personally and in our communities.  We all thanked the Pastoral Team and Katherine for all they do to assist us in our walk together. 
All parties of the El Salvador mission worked to create a covenant that formalizes partnerships and states expectations for each.  FPCDC and Cantón Virginia both agreed to the provisions in the covenant; with applause and great joy we committed to five more years of solidarity and all parties signed the document:
Pastor Adam for FPCDC


Directiva President David for Cantón Virginia

Nancy for Compañeros

Cecilia for the Pastoral Team

Mission Co-worker Katherine for the Presbytery of Des Moines' Our Sister Parish Mission
Everyone then moved inside for a time of music, prayer, and reflection.  There is always joyful music from the community members when we are together, and Adam offered a song on behalf of FPCDC. 
Blanca reminded us that we had some partying to do and everyone moved back outdoors where the kids were first in line for cookies and juice! 

Delegation members lined up in the shade along the church wall and received hugs and farewell blessings from person after person: young and old, men and women, teens and kids.  There were lots of tears and promises to meet again.  All this emotion was suddenly punctuated by loud whacks as the piñatas were attacked by boys and girls, and squeals of delight as the candy and treats poured out! 
With all the piñatas in shreds and the cookies and juice consumed, we asked the community to join us for a new group photograph to commemorate our renewed commitment to our partnership.  And here it is:

And then it really was time to say good-bye. 
We took one last truck ride back to the Pastoral House, ate a quick lunch, and then loaded all our bags into the bus for the trip back to San Salvador.  We made a stop at the Cathedral downtown--something we had postponed from our abbreviated first day.  A choir was practicing in the lower level where Oscar Arnulfo Romero is laid to rest as Katherine described the significance of the elements on his tomb.  It seemed very fitting to begin and end our El Salvador experience with Monseñor Romero's example of humility, compassion and justice.

We did a little shopping at the artisan's market where all sorts of Salvadoran crafts can be found.  We ate supper at a restaurant near our guesthouse and enjoyed traditional Salvadoran dishes--Sean bravely ordered iguana ("good, except for the bones").

The reflections on our last night were full of challenge and promise.  We are partnered with a beautiful community; we are led by a wise and hardworking Pastoral Team and Mission Co-worker; and we have all just experienced a week of transformation.  We have seen the poverty and vulnerability of the people we care about, and we have committed to five years of faithful accompaniment.  We have the task ahead of us to share what we now know with our church and our community.  This is not easy stuff!  But we celebrate both the promise and the challenge.

Sunday, August 2, 2015

Wrapping Up the House-to-House in a Big Way

The roads in Virginia were not so dusty today--because it rained in the night!  While this was good news, unless it continues to rain it will not save the people of the cantón's devastated crop year. We continued to hear from the families we visited that their corn was totally gone, with much worry on their faces. 
We made visits to the remainder of the homes and felt the same warmth and hospitality we had enjoyed yesterday.  We have so many photos to share when we get back to Iowa, but here are a few.  These brothers and sisters were such a joy to meet!



When we tell you about the welcome and hospitality, we're not just talking about the offer of a chair to sit in or a "bless you" and a hug in each home.  We received so much care--we were given strong arms to lean on as we negotiated uneven ground and special help for any of us who needed it.
By lunch time we had made it to every home but three.  These families live in a hard-to-reach part of the cantón and usually come to us when we visit.  Today we were advised that it was a long, hard walk but if some wanted to do it, they would be accompanied by members of the Pastoral Team and of the Virginia Directiva and it would be about an hour and a half on a steep footpath.  Of course we had some volunteers! 
They took off after lunch and the rest of us put our feet up and enjoyed the lovely breeze while we waited.  We also watched rainclouds gather over Berlín, a ways off.  Then we heard the rumble of thunder and felt the breeze stiffen a bit.  We searched the opposite mountainside for a sighting and saw the group still a distance away.  And suddenly the skies opened and it rained.  And rained.  And rained hard.  They returned drenched and exhausted, but honestly delighted. 



We will return to Virginia tomorrow for a final meeting with the Directiva and a celebration with the whole community.  There will surely be thanks given for the rain (although it will take many more days of this to help with their ruined crops.)  We have just one more morning to spend with our brothers and sisters of Cantón Virginia.  That doesn't seem like enough, either.

Saturday, August 1, 2015

House to House and Heart to Heart

The roads in Cantón Virginia are as dusty as they usually are at the end of the dry season in March--the dust billows up from truck tires and footsteps alike.  The group stirred up plenty of it as we made our way from home to home.
We were received with great joy and indeed, the new chairs were most often set out and we were entreated to sit!, sit!  Our visits were necessarily short--we have 112 families to visit in two days and many of them live up or down from the road, strewn along (I'm guessing) four miles of the mountainside.  But each visit meant so much to both us and our brothers and sisters here in Virginia.
We had to form two groups in order to make it to as many homes as possible on our first day.  The group I was with asked each family how they were doing and over and over again we heard the words "gone" and "finished".  Sadly they were describing their corn crop this year:
And that is exactly what we saw as we moved from house to house.  The corn is withered and in many places totally gone.  All we could do was express our sadness at their loss, and to promise to pray for rain to come soon. 
We asked if we could photograph the families we met.  It is so important to us to share these images because these truly are our brothers and sisters, people we love who matter so much.  We were welcomed into their family pictures and we hope the photos speak for the love we have for each other.



We were able to visit half of the community today--and will continue house to house and heart to heart tomorrow.