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Imagine being given the
opportunity to live 27 months of
your life in a foreign country.
Sounds like a dream come true,
right? But what if during that
time your task was to live among
the more disadvantaged people of
that country, helping them
improve their society by
teaching them things such as
farming techniques or computer
skills. Still sounds like a
dream come true? For about 140
current Latina Peace Corps
volunteers it is.
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A woman roasts
peanuts at the
consortium. |
Peace Corps
volunteer
Valerie León
(left) with
workers at the
Thai peanut
consortium where
she works to
increase sales. |
Women work in a
Thai peanut
consortium where
Peace Corps
volunteer
Valerie León
(not pictured)
assists with
marketing. |
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Since its inception in 1961,
after then–U.S. Senator John F.
Kennedy challenged university
students to serve their country
by working and living in
developing countries, more than
178,000 Peace Corps volunteers
have been invited by 138 host
countries to work on issues
ranging from AIDS education to
information technology to
environmental preservation. The
work of the volunteers has an
immeasurable impact: providing
support to children orphaned by
HIV/AIDS; helping farmers
improve local diets and increase
their income through farming
techniques; working with
development banks,
nongovernmental organizations,
and municipalities to support
local development projects. “The
Peace Corps volunteers, over the
past 44 years, have put a
positive face on America and
generated economic growth and
opportunities for people in
their host countries,” says
Peace Corps Director Gaddi
Vasquez.
The cultural exchange between
Peace Corps volunteers and their
host countries is also valuable.
Not only do the volunteers gain
first-hand experience of life in
another country, but they also
offer a window into the outside
world to people who will likely
never be able to see it
themselves. The volunteers, in
many ways, are U.S. ambassadors.
“I have been very fortunate to
have had the opportunity to
personally see the impact that
the volunteers have in the
communities they work in,” says
Susana Duarte, the Peace Corps’
chief compliance officer. “The
comments were the same,” she
continues. “’Please send us
more, we love our volunteers.
They help us so much!’ Taken all
together, I can justly say that
the Peace Corps positively
affects how the world sees
America and Americans. Peace
Corps volunteers help change the
world for the better.”
Peace Corps volunteers are a
diverse group: Of the over 7,700
current volunteers, 58 percent
are female; 15 percent are
ethnic minorities; 10 percent
are serving with a spouse; and 6
percent are over the age of 50.
Many Latinas have heeded
Kennedy’s vision over the years,
among them author Susana
Herrera. Today, more than 200
Latinos serve overseas as part
of the Peace Corps; over half of
those are Hispanic women.
Valerie León, a 27-year old
Ecuadorian-American from the
Bronx, N.Y., graduated from
Wesleyan University in
Connecticut with a degree in
government, and after working
for a time with the New York’s
Latino immigrant community
providing free legal services,
she decided to continue her
public-service work abroad and
applied to be a Peace Corps
volunteer. Currently she is
working in Thailand in the
subdistrict government
development office of Gud Nam
Said. The office is responsible
for the cultural, social, and
infrastructure development of
the subdistrict’s 13 villages.
“I am assigned to one of the
poorest provinces in Thailand,”
León says. “I am responsible for
capacity building within the
office, which involves me
working with the social programs
that are already in place in the
villages.”
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According to
Peace Corps
Director Gaddi
Vasquez (left),
Peace Corps
volunteers are
“passionate,
giving, and
visionary.” |
Constance Rivera
is a Peace Corps
volunteer in
South Africa.
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Peace Corps
volunteer
Cristina Finch
(far right) is
stationed in
Honduras with
husband Kevin
(fourth from
right). Here
Kevin coaches
his girls’
basketball team. |
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Some of León’s typical Peace
Corps activities are giving
lessons in using the Internet
and working on health promotion
and programming with the local
hospital and health centers,
focusing on issues such as
dengue and HIV/AIDS prevention.
But her duties do not stop
there. León also provides
assistance to various women’s
groups in her subdistrict, helps
develop training opportunities
for teachers at day care
centers, and helps promote
organic agriculture in the
communities.
She admits that the transition
to a completely different
culture was a significant
challenge at first. “My
experiences so far have been a
roller-coaster ride of emotions.
I come from a place where I am
fully able to express myself and
develop the two cultures into
which I was born,” she says. “In
New York City, I understand what
is going on, what is being said,
and why people react the way
they do. In Thailand, at least
when I first got here, I did not
understand anything that was
being said, what was going on
and why people reacted the way
they did.”
Well over halfway into her Peace
Corps tenure, things have
changed for León. “As of now,
this experience has given me so
much more than I ever expected,
not to mention all the new
technical and language skills I
have gained. Who would have
thought the quintessential
N.Y.C. Latina would know how to
speak Thai, know how to grow
organic rice and pick mangoes
and coconuts from a tree?” she
asks. According to León, what
she has grown to treasure most
are the new friends she has made
with local villagers from her
neighborhood and local
officials. “Through these
experiences, they have learned
how to dance Salsa and eat
habichuelas. I have learned how
to make spicy sour Thai soup and
how to dance Maw Lam. They have
learned the ethnic and cultural
spectrum of the United States
and I have learned to be more
patient, considerate of others
and [to] meditate.”
Through her experience, León has
stayed true to her roots. “I am
most proud of the fact that I am
able to represent progressive
thinking Latinos/ Americans
abroad, whose job description is
to offer peace, cultural and
idea exchange, not violence.”
For 24-year-old Constance
Rivera, volunteering in the
Peace Corps led her to leave the
United States for the first
time; as the Nuyorican explains
it, before heading to South
Africa, she had never lived more
than an hour’s car ride away
from her family.
A graduate of the State
University of New York at SUNY
at New Paltz, Rivera is a health
volunteer in the Gambia, where
she is tasked with dispensing
health information to her
community and training health
staff. Specifically, she works
in with a peer health group at
an area school where she
discusses health and sex
education with ninth-graders.
“After we have a lesson, the
students will go into their
communities and perform skits
based on what they have learned.
This way the information does
not just stay with them, but
reaches others as well,” she
says.
Rivera also spends time at a
women and girl’s skills center
and a local health center. At
the skills center, which is in
its beginning stages, Rivera
hopes she will be able to teach
women skills like sewing and
soap making so that they will be
more financially independent
from their husbands, as well as
to mentor schoolgirls with their
homework offer health
information.
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Peace Corps
Chief Compliance
Officer Susana
Duarte
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Sayuri Beltrán,
a Peace Corps
volunteer in
Grenada in the
early ’90s,
poses here with
schoolchildren
on the beach. |
Beltrán, again
with Grenadian
schoolchildren. |
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At
the local health center, she
participates in polio
immunization campaigns, mosquito
net dipping and personal hygiene
trainings for nearby
communities. “There are a lot of
simple behavioral changes that
people could do here to prevent
a lot of illness, but they
really don't know. We try and
dispense information that is
applicable to their daily lives
and will hopefully make a
difference in the quality of
their health,” says Rivera.
Eventually, after her two-year
tour is completed and she
returns to the United States to
continue her education, Rivera
says she hopes to work in the
development field. “I am
particularly interested in
women's development,” she says.
“My experience here will
absolutely be instrumental in
future career plans. More than
that though, this experience has
already made me a more patient
and flexible person. I know I
will take those traits back to
America with me.”
The Peace Corps experience for
Cristina Finch, 27, has also
been a roller coaster. But
Finch’s situation is a little
bit different. This native of
Maryland, who holds a master’s
degree in city planning and
civil engineering from Georgia
Institute of Technology is also
a newlywed—and currently serving
in El Paraíso, Honduras, with
her husband of 22 months, Kevin.
After becoming engaged in 2002,
Cristina and Kevin say, they
started looking into
opportunities to work or
volunteer that fall. “Many
volunteer positions we
researched were for one year or
less or it seemed the
organization in charge dropped
you off in the country and
offered little support
thereafter. Peace Corps was
appealing because we felt a
two-year service would give us a
better opportunity to learn
about the culture and the
situation of the people in the
country,” explains Cristina, who
is of Cuban and Peruvian
descent. “In the U.S. we grew up
with opportunities that people
in developing countries don’t
have and we wanted to try to
help others who aren’t as
fortunate,” she adds.
In El Paraíso, Cristina is a
municipal development volunteer.
As such, she works for the local
government, local schools, and
the culture center. “I’ve been
lucky to find projects in my
field. For example, I am helping
a local councilman improve the
traffic situation in El Paraíso,
including designing the traffic
pattern and installing signs,”
she says. She is also training
two employees of the local
government to use computer
programs such as Excel and
ArcView, a mapping program, and
she has helped create a women’s
employee club within the local
government that meets once a
month at a local café to
socialize and talk about work.
Her husband is a health
volunteer working primarily in
the local schools and the local
health center in HIV/AIDS
prevention. Last year the
Finches gave fifth- and
sixth-graders a 15-week course
on self-esteem, values,
sexuality, and HIV/AIDS
prevention. “One great thing
about being married in the Peace
Corps is that we have the
opportunity to work together,”
says Cristina.
Cristina says that one of her
greatest hurdles has been
dealing with her frustration at
seeing so many people
struggling, so many problems,
and realizing she can’t do it
all. “In our work, we always
have to re-group, re-evaluate,
and try again. Setbacks are a
way of life. Working in a
society that lacks money and
resources makes development and
change slow. As Americans, with
our fast-paced lifestyle and a
we-can-fix-anything attitude,
this is challenging,” she
explains.
For these Peace Corps
volunteers, the overseas
experience of living in another
country, breathing in its
culture, and learning a new set
of traditions and customs will
no doubt change their outlook of
life. For Sayuri Beltrán, who
volunteered on the island of
Grenada from 1993 to 1995, the
experience made her want to
become a lawyer. The 33-year-old
Peruvian-Japanese-Mexican-American
Texas native was on track to
become a teacher when she
graduated from the University of
Texas in Austin with a degree in
elementary education and entered
the Peace Corps. She recalls
growing up listening to her
godmother’s husband, who had
been a volunteer, tell stories
about his experience. Since the
fourth grade, she says, she was
fascinated with the idea of the
Peace Corps. “From the moment I
went into college, I knew that
was going to be the next step
thereafter,” she says.
In Grenada, Beltrán served as a
teacher trainer assigned to
“lower” schools, which were
equivalent to combined K-8
schools in the United States. In
this capacity, she would
instruct Grenadian teachers
about U.S. methods of
comprehension. One of the
challenges Beltrán encountered
was the lack of formal
university training the teachers
had received to become teachers.
According to Beltrán, the vast
majority of teachers were not
trained at the university level.
“A lot of people were teaching
the way they were taught,” she
says, adding that those methods
did not necessarily translate
into the most effective way for
children to learn.
There were also cultural
differences between the U.S. way
of teaching and methods used in
Grenada that Beltrán found
difficult to become accustomed
to. “I presumed the American way
was the best way [to teach] but
there are cultural differences,”
she says. “Some of the things
[U.S. teachers] do don’t
translate into their methods. I
found I was more effective my
second year because I was able
to accept certain limitations we
did have.”
Once she returned to the United
States, Beltrán found that her
experience in Grenada had
shifted her career plans: She
realized the power of knowledge,
and she couldn’t think of
anything better than studying
law. Even better, her new career
path has allowed her to continue
helping others. “There’s a lot
of injustice, not only here but
abroad,” she says.
For information on how to
volunteer with the Peace Corps,
visit www.peacecorps.gov or
contact your local recruitment
office at 1-800-424-8580.
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