Tzibal Slideshow from Ben Sampson on Vimeo.
Showing posts with label Operation Groundswell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Operation Groundswell. Show all posts
Monday, 26 November 2012
Wednesday, 1 August 2012
Mining Goes on Trial
At 5am on Saturday July 14, OGG packed up and headed off to San Miguel
Ixtahuacàn. There the group joined other international delegations, human
rights accompaniers, journalists, and local community members for the first
ever International Peoples Health Tribunal.
Initiated by local stakeholders in San Miguel Ixtahuacàn, the event was
coordinated in collaboration with Susana Caxaj, a University of Western
graduate student and volunteer with Mining Injustice Solidarity Network (MISN),
as well as the local Parrish and FREDEMI (Front in Defense of San Miguel
Ixtahuacàn). Also participating were people affected by Goldcorp’s Los Filos
mine in Mexico and its San Martín mine in Honduras, as well as representatives
from throughout El Salvador, Costa Rica, and Panama, who provided a regional
examination and critique of the resource extraction model and its effects on
communities.
The tribunal was structured to resemble a trial with a panel of 13 judges
presiding. For two days they and OGG listened to testimony from scientific
experts, human rights organizations, and community leaders directly affected by
mining. Specifically, tribunal heard
three cases from three different countries experiencing the (mal)effects of
mining operations owned and operated by Canadian gold giant Goldcorp. The tales
of contamination, defective and abortive pregnancies, skin malformations, inter
and intra community violence, as well as forced evictions and assassinations challenged
even the most ardent mining proponent.
The Verdict
After two days of testimony the international panel of distinguished
observers which included environmental scientists, psychologists, legal and
cultural anthropologists among others delivered a guilty verdict to Goldcorp,
the host countries of Honduras, Guatemala, and Mexico, as well as the Canadian
Government for supporting and promoting in various ways irresponsible mining in
Mesoamerica. The verdict read “...we find Goldcorp guilty for its activities in
Honduras, Guatemala and Mexico, which we find to be seriously damaging to the
health and the quality of life, the quality of environment, and the right to
self-determination of the affected Indigenous and campesino communities.”
“Now we will hear from Izabal”
With that, Raul Caal Coc, a delegate from Chichipate, El Estor,
immediately stood up throwing his arms in the air in triumph. For him and the
six other delegates from the Department of Izabal in Guatemala’s nickel rich
eastern reaches, the opportunity to speak and be heard was a rare victory. On
his flank were fellow embattled activists Maria and Angelica Choc. And it was
the powerful voices of the two Maya- Q'eqchi women from La Union, El Estor that
filled the hall of international judges, expert witnesses, Mesoamerican delegates, and interested onlookers. Their passionate pleas for action also served
to punctuate the two days of testimonies from affected communities.
Angelica began: “we are victims of the Canadian mining companies in our
country like many others that are here today… We are Indigenous people, we must
protect ourselves.” Angelica Choc is the widow of Adolfo Ich, a prominent
community leader from La Union, who in 2009 was gunned down by Mynor Padilla,
head of HudBay Nickels security subcontractor. Her and Maria are also the
sisters of political prisoner Ramiro Choc, an indigenous and community activist
who has been held in federal custody since 2008. Her assured voice continued:
“We are defending our mother earth because we know that it is from her that we
are able to eat and live… They [the companies] continue to offer projects in
our communities... Don’t believe them. The ‘bolsas solidarias’ they offer will
not endure over the years but our land, yes, it’s for our children. So we have
to defend them now… We are rich… and it is because of that foreign companies
have to rob our economic resources, our natural re- sources and everything we
have. And how? Violently and without shame. Do you know why they enter? Because
they think we are still in the 60’s and 70’s when they massacred our parents
and grandparents. They may still have blindfolds on, but today we, our
children, our grandchildren no longer have blindfolds on, YES or NO?” the crowd
quickly replied “No!”. Angelica then turned her attention to those that had not
bothered to attend, those who hide their eyes and cover their ears to the
abuses of their corporate citizens. “To the Canadian Government and Canadian
authorities” Angelica asked, “hear me in Canada and do not send me back to seek
justice in Guatemala. Because in my Guatemala there is no justice.”
The verdict, read in both Spanish and Mam, inspired cautious smiles and
applause from the Izabalense delegation and packed hall. But what now? Raul,
Angelica, Maria, Germán, and the women from Lote Ocho would return to Izabal
the following day where they will continue to face repression and persecution
as local indigenous populations continue the 500 year old fight for land and
livelihoods against foreign invasion and corporate dispossession.
Who is Ramiro Choc?
One delegate notably missing from the Izabalense delegation was Ramiro
Choc. Like his sisters, Angelica and Maria Choc, Ramiro is a prominent Q’eqchi’
peasant leader who has dedicated much of his life to the defense of indigenous
communities in Eastern and Central Guatemala. But on February 14, 2008 six
police officers dragged Ramiro Choc from a public bus en route to Guatemala
City and took him to an undisclosed location. There he was unlawfully detained
for 5 days and probably would have been made to join the country’s countless
disappeared had it not been for a serendipitously timed call to a lawyer — a
call Ramiro still believes saved his life. So, instead of suffering the planned
disposal, Mr. Choc suddenly reappeared in front of a judge on the trumped up
charges of aggravated robbery, land stealing, and kidnapping. If not so tragic the irony would be comedic.
Ramiro and the organizations for whom he worked, the National Indigenous and
Peasant Coordinating Committee (CONIC) and Encuentro Campesino, dedicate
themselves to defending embattled indigenous communities against the same
crimes for which he was accused and subsequently condemned. Ramiro was in fact convicted for his role in
mediating a stand-off between police and an indigenous Garifuna community near
Livingston in 2007. Invited by the Department’s Governor, he had travelled to
Barrio Buena Vista la Esperanza to help negotiate the release of a group of men
forcibly held by the community for trespassing and land theft. But as reward
for mediating a nonviolent conclusion to a volatile confrontation - Ramiro was
arrested and now, four years later, continues to sleep on a cement floor in the
notorious Pavon prison. Ramiro Choc
became eligible for parole in February of 2011 but was unable to pay the
extrajudicial fine attached to his sentence making probation and freedom a
luxury he simply couldn’t afford. But there is hope. The stubborn determination
of his sisters has collided with the dedicated activism of Rights Action and
others. And this growing North-South alliance has raised sufficient funds to
satisfy the states extortion. But for now, in his cell, Ramiro still waits.
For more information on the International Peoples Health Tribunal and the
continuing struggles of San Miguel Ixtahuacàn and Izabal please visit: www.rightsaction.org
In Images...
Tuesday, 5 June 2012
Five Moons over Xela
Xela, Xela, Xelaaaa!* That oh so familiar sound signaled our arrival in,
you guessed it, Xela. So, off the chicken bus we poured. Nine passionate and
eager participants who had joined us only a day earlier all came rushing out
and into the busy bus terminal. Although still jetlagged the group had already
endured a whirl-wind 24hr tour of the country’s capitals, old and new, as well
as an epic 5hr chicken bus ride up and onto Guatemala’s Western Highlands. They
had even overcome a blown tire, albeit with help from a couple of ayudantes
that would rival Nascar’s best pit crews. So, after a little urban trek from
the Terminal to Escuela Xelaju and our cosy little casita, the group settled
in. But before any sleep could be had OG got word that the Chivos, Xela´s
beloved football team, would be playing in Guatemala’s National Championship
against its rival from the capital, Municipal.
Soccer isn’t a sport here, it´s a way of life. So, OG went and grabbed
some grub and prepared for their first cross-cultural lesson. The group of
gringos crowded around the TV, cheering on the Chivos with the gusto of any
Quetzalteco. And the Goats did not disappoint… After 90 minutes of nail biting,
two action packed overtimes followed. But still nothing could be decided on the
open pitch, so the Championship came down to penalties. Some participants
covered their eyes, while others shouted profanities. A few were visibly
confused by the whole ritual. But within minutes they were all on their feet as
the Chivos and their Quetzalteco followers stormed onto the field and into the
streets to celebrate the city’s fifth championship and the extra cleft moon
that would now adorn their jerseys. And what better way to celebrate the new
moon than to howl at it. Fireworks blasted and music blared as Parqué Central
became party headquarters with a group of gringos and Xela’s newest honour
guard right at its heart.
Labels:
Escuela Xelaju,
Guatemala,
Operation Groundswell,
Super Chivos,
Xela
Location:
Quetzaltenango, Guatemala
Wednesday, 30 May 2012
Here & Back Again
So, it has been 7 months, over
40,000 miles and an additional 14 country stamps but I’m back. Can’t say this
was a part of the plan but it’s nice to be back in the land of black sand,
tortillas and traje, aka home. The infamous Allie Stote and I hit the ground
here in Guatemala one week ago. And in the days that followed we criss-crossed
this small funny shaped country by Tuc-tuc, Micro, Pullman, and Chicken bus. We
visited Antigua and Operation Groundswell’s amazing partner As Green as it Gets. This coffee
cooperative made up of Guatemalan campesinos and one very loveable, albeit
pessimistic, ex-pat, continues to forge sustainable livelihoods for its members
through creative agricultural practices and a variety of innovative development
programs. We then travelled north to Xela where Quetzaltrekkers keeps
on trucking ready and willing trekkers to the Guatemala’s highest volcanic and
non- volcanic points while supporting some of the country’s most
underprivileged children through the Escuela
de la Calle (EDELAC) and El Hogar. This year, Quetzaltrekkers will help our
crew get on tops of things and in return OGG will be establishing a scholarship
fund for QT’ kids. Before skippin’ town we had to stop in a say “hola” to the
equally amazing Escuela La Paz
where OGG 2012 will be studying Spanish alongside an incredible group of
indigenous women.
1½ hours north
of Xela near the small city of Colomba ex-guerilla fighters have traded their
tools of war for tools of trade, the coffee trade that is. After arranging some
sweet digs with the local coffee farmers and families of Santa Anita La Union,
Allie and I turned back south eventually reaching the warm shores of Lago
Atitlan and the open arms of San Juan la Laguna and Rupalaj Kistalin. This indigenous
Tzitsujil community is increasingly turning its small artisanal and eco-industries
into income generating tourist attractions while maintaining its rich cultural
and linguistic heritage. But despite the temptations of this laid-back lakeside
paradise we journeyed on. First south to Guate then east to Alta Verapaz and
the tiny town of Tzibal. There OGG past and present will collide in a crazy
construction project called La Cancha (The “Court”). This innovative community
centre and basketball/soccer court features a water catching roof, composting
toilettes, and organic garden (complete with 20lb radishes!). But after
meetings with the COCODE (Development council), on-site coordinator, community
teachers, and a night’s rest in a lawn chair we retraced our steps to Guate and
the cozy casita of friends Luchy & Fam. And here we waited for OGG 2012 to
begin…
Friday, 21 October 2011
All That Glitters Isn't Gold: Part II
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| Beautiful Izabal |
Before roads and railroads, Lake Izabal was
what linked the Guatemalan interior to the rest of the world. Commonly
referred to as "the store" in English, the name evolved to its
present form due to Spanish-speakers style of pronunciation and spelling. What
is now known as "El Estor" was the landing and trading post for cargo
and travelers to journeying from the coast to Cobán and beyond. This strategic
position is what made it an attractive location to set up shop. Unfortunately, one of the first to do so was
the United Fruit Company, who came to dominate the region by appropriating the agricultural
lands and denigrating the local indigenous population to manorial labour. In
the 1960’s and 1970’s under the fog of war, a civil war that the UFC helped start, the
company quietly withdrew from El Estor. Yet, as misfortune had it “the store” was
located on Central America’s single largest nickel deposit and almost as
quickly as one feudal giant left, another one took its place. EXMIBAL was a
subsidiary of Canadian nickel giant, INCO, and until the war ended and nickel
prices crashed in the 1980’s, it, like United Fruit, continued to perform what Galeano
described as neo-colonial alchemy. Finally, in the 1990’s, and for little more than
a decade, relative peace reigned. However, in 1997, a new neoliberal Mining Law
and rising mineral prices combined to produce a %1000 increase in extractive
exploration and exploitation in Guatemala. One of the first places that was re-opened
for business was “the store” and one of the first company’s interested in restarting
its alchemy was INCO.
Building on what it had seen and heard in San Miguel
Ixtahuacán, OGG traveled to Izabal to meet with anti-mining activists Raúl and
María and visit the affected community of Lote Ocho.
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| María Choc addressing OG and the community in Lote Ocho Photo courtesy of Laura Huddart. |
Allison writes:
“Today we visited the community of Lote 8, it’s close to the
mine run by HudBay Mineral, another Canadian company. This particular community
is made up of about 25 families and they are going through hell. Their
community is in constant threat of being evicted by the mining company. At one
point their entire village was burned to the ground, but they returned and
rebuilt because this is their home, their land. Recently they have moved their
village an hour hike uphill so that they can keep watch on who is coming and
try to defend themselves. A couple years ago, security forces came to the town
and because all the men were away at work they distracted the children and
violently gang raped a dozen women, one of those women was telling us her story
and saying how difficult it is to talk about. The whole community came out to
meet with our group; they are so strong, so connected. They are all going
through the same struggle and are so supportive of one another. Men and women
both feel comfortable to speak up and the woman translating Q’eqchi to Spanish
for us was a powerful woman with a commanding presence. Her sister is Angelica
Choc who is currently suing the mine in Canadian court for the assassination of
her husband who was a prominent community leader. The most powerful part of the
day was when the women asked us after hearing their stories, “What are you
going to do about this?” Wow, we can no longer be apathetic.”
Late on Friday August 5, 2011, just two days after our visit
to the area, HudBay Minerals announced that it had agreed to sell 100% of its
interest in the Fenix Mining Project located in El Estor, Guatemala. HudBay reportedly
sold its stock in the nickel mine for $170 million, a fraction of the $460
million that the Canadian company paid for the project just three years earlier.
So, why the costly corporate retreat? "We believe this
sale was prompted in part by the severe human rights issues at HudBay's Fenix
Project that dogged the company at every turn. The murder of Adolfo Ich, and
the gang-rapes of Rosa Elbira and the 10 other women at Lote Ocho committed by
mine security personnel are albatrosses that weigh heavily on the neck of HudBay,"
said Murray Klippenstein. Klippenstein is the Toronto based firm representing
Angelica Choc in a lawsuit against HudBay for the 2009 targeted killing of her
husband, Adolfo Ich, by CGN (HudBay's wholly owned subsidiary) private security
guards. Klippensteins also happens to be representing the 11 Mayan-Qeqchi women
from the community of Lote 8 who were gang-raped by police, soldiers, and the
same CGN security forces, as part of an illegal, forced eviction in 2007.
![]() |
A memorial to Adolfo Ich. Since his murder his
image has become symbolic of anti-mining movements across the country.
|
The impunity in Guatemala that allows for a complete
disregard for human rights and the rule of law is a well-documented and
devastating phenomenon that dates back generations but like Maude Barlow, Chair
of the Council of Canadians noted on her recent visit to Guatemala, impunity “is
not only a Guatemalan phenomenon. It is profoundly a Canadian phenomenon.”
Klippenstein hopes the recent sale and law suits serve “as a
lesson to Canadian companies that ignoring concerns over risks of severe human
rights abuse can be incredibly expensive." But while Murray’s clients
“continue to vigorously pursue their claims against HudBay and HMI in Ontario
courts to ensure these Canadian companies are held accountable for their past
wrongful acts," in Canada, there remains little chance for success much
less redress.
Canada, unlike other countries, has no legal provisions or precedents,
criminal or civil, for foreign claimants to pursue cases against Canadian
companies for crimes committed outside of Canada. And even modest legislative attempts
to introduce increased corporate accountability have been confronted by a coalition
of staunch status quo defenders and human rights offenders, among them major mining
industry players, Barrack Gold, and Goldcorp, as well as the Department of
Foreign Affairs and International Trade, the Canada Pension Plan, and Export
Development Canada. Between 2009 and 2010, their concerted lobbying effectively
sabotaged Bill C-300, an Act Respecting Corporate Accountability for the
Activities of Mining, Oil or Gas in Developing Countries. The same motley crew subsequently
reunited to prevent the passing of Bill C-354, an initiative paralleling the
American Alien Torts Claims Act that would have amended the Federal Courts
Act to ensure the international promotion and legal protection of human rights.
However, in 2011, the crimes of HudBay, the environmental
violations of Goldcorp, and the human rights abuses of Barrack Gold have again
become popular press items and prominent public concerns. Consequently, C-354
has been resurrected in the form of private members Bill C-323, currently being
re-tabled in the House of Commons. In this new context, the cases of Angelica
Choc and the 11 brave women of Lote Ocho may just have the potential to haunt
Hudbay long after its sale of the Fenix Mining Project.
Please show your support for Angelica, Lote 8, and all
the other victims of Canadian corporate malfeasance by supporting Bill C-323
and other initiatives towards minimum and mandatory standards of corporate
accountability.
Labels:
Adolfo Ich,
Angelica Choc,
C-300,
C-323,
C-354,
CGN,
El Estor,
EXMIBAL,
Hudbay,
INCO,
Lote Ocho,
Operation Groundswell,
United Fruit
Thursday, 11 August 2011
Lazy & Crazy on the Cahabón (Written for the OGG Blog)
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| Semuc Champey |
The geological oddity that is Semuc Champey is widely
advertised as the most beautiful spot in Guatemala. It consists of a series of
limestone pools and gentle waterfalls that perch atop the raging Cahabón River.
At its mouth, visitors can gawk as the river disappears in a torrent beneath
their feet, and then, after relaxing in the cascading turquoise blue waters
above, watch as the river furiously remerges 300m below.
![]() |
| The Cahabón River |
![]() |
| The Cahabón Disappearing Beneath Semuc Champey's Lime Stone Bridge |
![]() |
| And Reappearing 300m Below |
Meanwhile, up above...
![]() |
| Photo courtesy of Laura Huddart |
OGG, after an epic week in Tzibal, arrived in Lanquin, a
quiet town that largely exists as a service station and hub for the travellers
looking to lay eyes on and wallow in the waters of the Lanquin River and nearby
Semuc Champey. There, the group settled into a cabana at El Retiro Lodge, a
“backpackers paradise” if there ever was one, to enjoy the first of 3 days of relaxation
and reflection before ITT. On day 2, OGG migrated the 11 km to Las Marias, a
more modest refuge strategically situated 800m from Semuc’s gates. The group
spent the better part of the day basking in the sun and bathing in the pools of
Semuc before taking to candle light and exploring the nearby Kamba Caves.
Despite its many hotels, hostels, and rumours that Lanquin would
imminently acquire its first ATM, rumours that have been circulating since my
first visit in 2007, the tourist town still provides no way of getting all
important Quetzales. So, leaving the group at Guatemala’s natural spa, Allison
and I hauled ass into Cobán to haul out dinero. Not an unenjoyable journey by
pick-up and micro through the “egg carton hills” and one which was deliciously capped
off by a lunch of empanadas and papas fritas. But, TIG (this is Guatemala) and
with wait times the 4hr trip turned into 6 and we returned from our day just in
time to see the rest of the group returning in inner tubes from theirs.
The following day the group returned to Lanquin to meet the guys from the Association of Tourism and Ecological Development of Saquijá (ADETES). Deep in the thick of the Guatemalan jungle, and tucked into the mountains of Alta Verapaz, the community of Saquijá was founded over 100 years ago by a group of three families. Today the community boasts about 1000 residents, most of whom live as subsistence farmers. But since 2006, they have begun to use the attraction of the river to improve their circumstances through a community based tourism initiative. ADETES has received professional training from international rafting instructors and the Red Cross of Guatemala and now guides foreigners and locales alike down the class I, II, III, IV, and V’s of the Río Lanquin and Río Cahabón, on a route that has been ranked one of the top twelve jungle river trips in the world by Paddler Magazine.
![]() |
| The "Dream Team" Photo Courtesy of Allison Isaak |
Sadly, Laura had fallen ill and she and Jay remained behind
as the group geared up and set out for 5hr’s of craziness on the Cahabón.
Despite, confronting “Rock N Roll,” “Entonces,” and the infamous “Tres Hermanos,”
OGG’s “Dream Team” and “Unnamed Boat #2” emerged unscathed from a river that
had recently and severely victimized two PeaceCorps volunteers. Back at Las
Marías, OGG enjoyed a good meal, a better beer, and a well-earned bed. The
following day they would be heading by Micro across the Chixoy-Polochic Fault
and Minas Mountains to the Department of Izabal where they would visit the
mining affected communities of Cahaboncito, Lotte 8, and El Estor.
Labels:
ADETES,
Cahabón,
Cobán,
El Retiro Lodge,
Guatemala,
Kamba Caves,
Lanquin,
Las Marías,
Operation Groundswell,
Semuc Champey
Location:
Lanquín, Guatemala
Tuesday, 9 August 2011
The Land of Love & Tortillas
Tzibal is a small indigenous village located about two kilometers from Campur in what I affectionately call Guatemala’s “egg carton hills” but don’t try to find it on a map. There are about 380 Q'eqchi' residents who rely on the farming of coffee, cardamom, bananas, black pepper, and mandarins as their principle sources of income. The community has no electricity or running water, but has just acquired a cell-phone signal, albeit faint, and to we CLARO carrying Trip Leader’s frustration, only for those with TIGO. We also quickly learned that the community boasts abundances of love, generosity, and tortillas, so many tortillas.
![]() |
| The Egg Carton Hills |
From our bienvenidos at the escuela, to meals with our lovely families, soccer games in the street, haircut, healthcare, and Chicky (oh so delicious chocolate covered cookies) runs to Campur, jungle hikes, evening masses, and poolside parties, OGG spent an amazing week cultivating cross-cultural connections and constructing a “bottle school.”
Bottle School projects are being undertaken across Guatemala with the support and tutelage of OG partner, Hug-It-Forward. HIF is a San Diego-based non-profit that blends intangible change with tangible results. They utilize 100% of donations on the ground in the communities where bottle schools are built; meaning absolutely no money is taken for overhead or salaries. Their Bottle Schools are only initiated by community invitation and initiative. The participation of the collective ensures a sense of local ownership and pride while serving the educational needs of the community’s children. Hug-it-Forward then coordinates with the Guatemalan Ministry of Education, and other organizations (including PeaceCorps), to facilitate the construction and sustainability of the innovative structures and its services. There are already no less than 10 built in Guatemala with many more in the planning stages.
Bottle School projects are being undertaken across Guatemala with the support and tutelage of OG partner, Hug-It-Forward. HIF is a San Diego-based non-profit that blends intangible change with tangible results. They utilize 100% of donations on the ground in the communities where bottle schools are built; meaning absolutely no money is taken for overhead or salaries. Their Bottle Schools are only initiated by community invitation and initiative. The participation of the collective ensures a sense of local ownership and pride while serving the educational needs of the community’s children. Hug-it-Forward then coordinates with the Guatemalan Ministry of Education, and other organizations (including PeaceCorps), to facilitate the construction and sustainability of the innovative structures and its services. There are already no less than 10 built in Guatemala with many more in the planning stages.
![]() |
| How it works |
But I’ll let Ali, Allison, and our fantastic PeaceCorps host, Hannah, share there takes.
Hannah (quoted from her blog ¨Cartas de Lejos”):
“The 11 volunteers (Canadian and American University students/recent grads) stayed in the village with host families and worked at the school each day, classifying the 10,000 bottles (a horribly tedious task that I owe them big time for) hauling rocks, and playing with the village children. I owe these guys a huge thanks for their time, dedication, and amazing enthusiasm for the bottle project and the Tzibal community at large. The community could not have been prouder to host this lovely group of "kaxlan," and their stay will long be remembered by the families they stayed with and the children who will soon have a brand-new school.”
Allison adds:
“… Well, we tried to spend the week working, but we kept getting distracted by the kids wanting to play with us, the teachers taking pictures of us, women inviting us to their weekly woman’s group, families taking us on a hike through the jungle, and the whole town throwing us a fiesta that lasted for 6 hours. What a week. But we did manage to move some concrete and sort the thousands of bottles that will be used in the construction of the bottle school…”
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| Constructing Bottle School Additional photos courtesy of Laura Huddart |
“Tzibal stole our hearts to the fullest extent. From the first step we took into the classroom to the last steps we took out of the aldea [hamlet], we felt the strongest sense of hospitality imaginable. Upon our arrival, the teachers and students arranged us to walk in a single file line into the classroom so that they could give us each an individual round of applause.”
They then serenaded us with Q’eqchi’ and Spanish songs, challenged us to games of musical chairs and fed us fresh fruit and Caparina. When we finally admitted defeat, we were introduced to the families with whom we would be spending the week. The hospitality however, never ceased.
“Throughout the entire week they housed us, fed us, did our laundry, and genuinely cared for us as a family would. What really got me was that they provided us with everything we needed and more, which was particularly grounding considering they had next to nothing to give. Living with next to nothing, my family showed me what it was to be truly happy. This is a community with no running water, no electricity, and few, if any, living comforts at all, and yet they live like they have all they need. In carrying out their daily lives, they taught by example that simplicity makes for a richer life than complexity. This mindset rang through the entire community; never before have I interacted with happier children than those of Tzibal, and what do they have? A community soccer ball, basketball, and volleyball. The ability of those children to take what they have and make the very most of it was, to say the least, refreshing after growing up surrounded by the excesses of North America. The spirit of the entire community- men, women, and children- was in one word inspiring. I have never met a more resilient, hospitable, and purely happy group of people in my entire life.
![]() |
| The kids of Tzibal Additional photos courtesy of Allie Stote, Allison Isaak, and Laura Huddart |
Allison goes on to describe the unique connection that was made.
“From the moment we set foot in the community to the moment we left, we felt so welcomed … Sure we didn’t speak any Q’eqchi’ and yes, most of our host mom’s didn’t speak any Spanish either, but somehow we still communicated and connected and my host mom still wanted my cell number, not sure what she will do with it but the gesture was really touching. She also tried to teach me how to make tortillas at which I failed miserably but I made a solid effort. The whole community was so thankful for our presence and so gracious to us that we at times felt like we hadn’t done enough for them in return for all their gratitude, and so to my family and friends in Tzibal, I say, “bantiosh,” [Thank you in Q’eqchi] and hopefully we were able to have as positive an impact on Tzibal as Tzibal had on us.”
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| OGG & Tzibal Additional photos courtesy of Allison Isaak, Chelsea Poupore, and Laura Huddart |
“B'antiox” indeed. OGG was so touched by the hospitality, generosity, and so taken by the genuine connections they made with the community of Tzibal that participants decided that their work on the bottle school was just simply not enough. So after some, but not much, deliberation, and an über unanimous decision that OGG’s fundraising should stay with its heart, in Tzibal. For those unfamiliar with Operation Groundswell: One unique part of OG’s program is that each and every participant is required to fundraise $1000, 50% of which is used to facilitate contributions to local partners and projects, and, in part, to help offset the burden and costs associated with accommodating X number of gringos. 35% is secured in a central OG fund for larger scale and longer term projects while 10% is used to carbon offset all participant and TL flights.
So, OGG reflected on the week’s events and recalled their participation in a community meeting which all of the town’s women and many of the children attended. The gathering had been held in an old church space because none of the women’s houses were big enough to host the group. They remembered that the following night, we had attended an evangelical church service that was held in someone’s one-room homestead. Locals and OGers had been crammed onto the few benches with children, big and small, necessarily sitting on their parents’ laps. Nevertheless, many people had been forced to stand in the doorways and outside the house to participate in the service. Additionally, our work in and around the school and afternoon activities with the kids had made us all acutely aware that the only space for outdoor games and sport was on the town’s main road, a sloping patch of dirt and gravel, where in addition to the dangers of turning vehicles, serious falls, scrapes, and bruises were common. Needless to say the community’s need for a safer place to play and learn was obvious. And combining this need with the lack of space for women’s meetings and social gatherings, we came to the conclusion that fundraising could be used to contribute to the construction of a recreational and civic space. So a covered “Cancha“ was proposed. Not just a safe place for games, gym class, and after school sports, but a public space capable of accommodating the community’s social congregations.
The team voted and agreed that – pending the wishes of Tzibal’s 300 citizens – we would continue working with Tzibal to construct its first Centro de Comunidad.
Enthusiasm for the collaborative project hasn’t diminished. A potential design has been generously provided by Baird Sampson Neuert Architects and a new larger plot of land acquired courtesy of a local resident. However, even with the pledges of land and labour, material costs will still exceed community means and OGG’s budget. Participants have therefore channelled their enthusiasm into a renewed fundraising effort. The goal is $6,500, a daunting task but a modest sum for what will become a social hub and living testament to cross-cultural and communitarian initiative. For all those equally inspired to help, we invite, nay, we ask that you to make a pledge, small or large, Quetzal or Dollar.
So, OGG reflected on the week’s events and recalled their participation in a community meeting which all of the town’s women and many of the children attended. The gathering had been held in an old church space because none of the women’s houses were big enough to host the group. They remembered that the following night, we had attended an evangelical church service that was held in someone’s one-room homestead. Locals and OGers had been crammed onto the few benches with children, big and small, necessarily sitting on their parents’ laps. Nevertheless, many people had been forced to stand in the doorways and outside the house to participate in the service. Additionally, our work in and around the school and afternoon activities with the kids had made us all acutely aware that the only space for outdoor games and sport was on the town’s main road, a sloping patch of dirt and gravel, where in addition to the dangers of turning vehicles, serious falls, scrapes, and bruises were common. Needless to say the community’s need for a safer place to play and learn was obvious. And combining this need with the lack of space for women’s meetings and social gatherings, we came to the conclusion that fundraising could be used to contribute to the construction of a recreational and civic space. So a covered “Cancha“ was proposed. Not just a safe place for games, gym class, and after school sports, but a public space capable of accommodating the community’s social congregations.
The team voted and agreed that – pending the wishes of Tzibal’s 300 citizens – we would continue working with Tzibal to construct its first Centro de Comunidad.
Enthusiasm for the collaborative project hasn’t diminished. A potential design has been generously provided by Baird Sampson Neuert Architects and a new larger plot of land acquired courtesy of a local resident. However, even with the pledges of land and labour, material costs will still exceed community means and OGG’s budget. Participants have therefore channelled their enthusiasm into a renewed fundraising effort. The goal is $6,500, a daunting task but a modest sum for what will become a social hub and living testament to cross-cultural and communitarian initiative. For all those equally inspired to help, we invite, nay, we ask that you to make a pledge, small or large, Quetzal or Dollar.
On behalf of OGG 2011 and the community of Tzibal, Thank You, Gracias, and B'antiox!
Pledges and donations will be accepted on Operation Groundswell’s dojiggy fundraising site available below.
For more information: See an executive summary of the project proposal below or please feel free to contact me or any of the other team members. Directions are at the bottom.
Project Proposal: Executive Summary
Introduction
Tzibal is a small indigenous village located about two kilometers from Campur in what I affectionately call Guatemala’s “egg carton hills”. There are about 380 Q'eqchi' residents who rely on the farming of coffee, cardamom, bananas, black pepper, and mandarins as their principle sources of income. The community has no electricity or running water, but abundances of love, generosity, and tortillas, so many tortillas.
From OGG’s bienvenidos at the escuela, to meals with our lovely families, soccer games in the street, haircut, healthcare, and Chicky (oh so delicious chocolate covered cookies) runs to Campur, jungle hikes, evening masses, and poolside parties, OGG spent an amazing week cultivating cross-cultural connections and, when there was time, “building” a bottle school. But it didn't end there.
Tzibal is a small indigenous village located about two kilometers from Campur in what I affectionately call Guatemala’s “egg carton hills”. There are about 380 Q'eqchi' residents who rely on the farming of coffee, cardamom, bananas, black pepper, and mandarins as their principle sources of income. The community has no electricity or running water, but abundances of love, generosity, and tortillas, so many tortillas.
From OGG’s bienvenidos at the escuela, to meals with our lovely families, soccer games in the street, haircut, healthcare, and Chicky (oh so delicious chocolate covered cookies) runs to Campur, jungle hikes, evening masses, and poolside parties, OGG spent an amazing week cultivating cross-cultural connections and, when there was time, “building” a bottle school. But it didn't end there.
OGG was so touched by the
hospitality, generosity, and so taken by the genuine connections they made with
the community of Tzibal that its participants decided that their work on the
bottle school was just simply not enough. So, after some deliberation and a unanimous
vote it was decided that OGG’s fundraising should stay with its heart, in
Tzibal. For those unfamiliar with Operation Groundswell: One unique part of
OG’s program is that each and every participant is required to fundraise $1000,
approx. 50% of which is used to facilitate in-country contributions to local
partners and projects. Approx. 35% is secured in a central OG fund for larger
scale and longer termed projects while 10% is used to carbon offset all
participant and TL flights.
After
some reflection and community consultation, the need for a safer site to play
and facility capable of accommodating community congregations was made explicit.
Consequently, participants concluded that they should respond to the
community’s request and contribute to the construction of a civic and
recreational space, the result is “La Cancha” project, a covered outdoor Centro
de Comunidad.
Enthusiasm
for the collaborative project hasn’t diminished. A potential design has been
generously provided by Baird Sampson Neuert Architects and a new larger plot of
land acquired courtesy of a local resident. However, even with the pledges of
land and labour, material costs will still exceed community means and OGG’s
budget. Participants have therefore channelled their enthusiasm into a renewed
fundraising effort. The goal is $6,500, a daunting task but a modest sum for
what will become a social hub and living testament to cross-cultural and
communitarian initiative. For all those equally inspired to help, we invite,
nay, we ask that you to make a pledge, small or large, Quetzal or Dollar. Donations
can be made at www.operationgroundswell.causevox.com/Tzibal
On
behalf of OGG 2011 and the community of Tzibal, Thank You and B'antiox!
![]() |
| The current situation Additional photos courtesy of Allie Stote and Laura Huddart |
![]() |
| La Cancha - The Beginning |
The Goal (Why Give?)
The principal goal of the Cancha project is to construct a public and multi-purpose community centre and versatile recreational infrastructure. The site is situated in close proximity to the community school facilitating its use for school related games, sports, and activities. Outside of school hours the space will be available for soccer, volleyball, and basketball providing a safe space away from the effects of alcohol and domestic violence, which remain concerns in rural communities such as Tzibal. Additionally, the community centre will provide a forum for cultural and civic gatherings, including fiestas, ferias, performances, community consultations, and the women’s group meetings. Tzibal’s access to comparable facilities is limited by its isolation. Moreover, localizing such events will promote civic engagement and cultural enrichment, sustaining and further fostering the strong sense of community already present in Tzibal.
Based on community consultation, OGG consulted award winning Toronto firm, Baird Sampson Neuert Architects about plausible design options. Preliminary plans were subsequently drawn up and presented to Tzibal in September 2011. The design includes a paved court with nets and goal posts. Reminiscent of a Mayan ball court, 3 tier bleachers will frame the two lengths of the Cancha. Two steel support arms and one tensioned cable in an A-frame formation will stand in each of the four corners (two tall: approx. 7 metres and two low: approx. 3 metres). The roof utilises a web of steel cabling held in tension by the rigid steel substructure. Suspended above, aluminum panelling will span the 1000m2 tented surface providing shade, shelter, and natural drainage. Beneath the two low drainage points will be 20,000+ litre cast concrete cisterns. Positioned, adjacent to the catchment cisterns will be sanitation facilities (special sinks known as pilas as well as showers) with latrines positioned nearby.![]() |
| The Innovation Courtesy of Baird Sampson Neuert Architects |
![]() |
| The Preliminary Design Courtesy of Baird Sampson Neuert Architects |
| The Floor Plan Courtesy of Baird Sampson Neuert Architects |
| A-Frames, Cisterns, and ... Courtesy of Baird Sampson Neuert Architects |
| ... Composting Latrines Courtesy of Baird Sampson Neuert Architects |
Project Revenue in CAD$
| |
Tzibal Community Donation
|
$ 600 + all manual labour and transport
|
OGG 2011 Donation
OGG Alum Fundraising |
$ 1,500
$ 6,500 |
Pending OG Project Fund Request
|
$ 6,500
|
Pending OGG 2012 Donations
Municipality Contribution Total Revenue |
$ 2,000
Basketball/Soccer Nets $ 17,100 |
Project Expenses in CAD$ | |
Land Property
|
$ 2,000
|
Gravel
|
$ 1,500
|
Steel Posts
|
$ 1,500
|
Roof Cables
|
$ 4,000
|
Aluminum Roofing
|
$ 3,500
|
Cement
|
$ 3,000
|
Goal posts/nets
|
no cost
|
“Pila” Sinks, Shower & Toilet
|
$ 1,000
|
Transport of Materials
|
no cost
|
Manual Labour
|
no cost
|
Total Expenses | $ 16,500 |
The Plan
The initial project proposal and preliminary design, which was developed by the OGG 2011 participants, henceforth referred to as OGG Alum, Program Coordinators, Ben Sampson and Jay Wall, as well as Baird Sampson Neuert Architects, received overwhelming support from community leaders. However, the Cancha will require approximately $20,000 worth of land, labour, and material inputs. Although, this is dramatically cheaper than similarly sized structures and more easily implementable than more traditional court designs, it nevertheless, remains well beyond the means of any single stakeholder and thus can only be achieved through a sustained collaborative initiative. For their part, OGG Alum committed $1,500 to help secure the two cuerdas of land required for the facility’s footprint and to facilitate the commencement of necessary clearing and grading. This was delivered in person on October 3, 2011 by Ben Sampson. The OGG Alum additionally pledged to raise $6,500 privately in hopes that that number would be matched by OG’s central project fund. In this regard, on October 9, 2011, a project proposal was submitted to OGHQ which included a formal request for $6,500 in grant moneys as well as provided the framework for the establishment of the Tzibal Cancha Project Fund which launched on Oct. 15, 2011. The remaining inputs will come from the community, the municipality, and locally based NGO’s in the form of financial contributions and material donations. As of January 1, 2012, the Cancha Project Fund held contributions from five OGG Alum and their generous donors amounting to $4,000. A second transfer was subsequently made to Tzibal on March 3, 2012 so as to facilitate the requisition of materials and the commencement of construction. On March 5, 2012, OGHQ approved the grant request for $6,500 and began welcoming donations at www.operationgroundswell.causefox.com/Tzibal. May 1, 2012, is now the final deadline for the achievement of the all required revenues. Final blueprints and total funding will be subsequently transferred to on-site coordinator and community member, Eric Cuz Choc in person on May 15, 2012 with construction slated for June & July, completion set for early August, and the Cancha’s inauguration tentatively scheduled for August 2012.
But we need your help. So, please Give!
The Stakeholders
This is the wonderful and diverse group of people working together from Guatemala, Canada, and the United States to bring this project to fruition.
The Community of Tzibal
San Pedro Carchá, Alta Verapaz, Guatemala
| ||
| Hannah Gdalman
Youth Development Volunteer, Peace Corps
OG Financial Liaison
Aldea Campur, San Pedro Carchá, Alta Verapaz, Guatemala
|
Erick Rodolfo Cuz Choc
Director, Escuela Oficial Rural Mixta
OG Materials/Operations Coordinator
Aldea Tzibal, San Pedro Carcha, Alta Verapaz, Guatemala
| |
| Ben Sampson
OG Guatemala Trip Leader
Project Coordinator
Toronto / Guatemala / Ghana / France
tel. 416-505-4262 (Canada) / 502 4679-0301 (Guatemala)
| Jay Wall
OG Guatemala Trip Leader
Project Associate
Toronto, ON
tel. 416-899-6633
| |
| Allie Stote
OG Guatemala Participant
Project Coordinator
Cambridge, MA
tel. 781-548-1063
| Allison Isaak
OG Guatemala Participant
Project Associate
Brandon, MB
| |
| Chelsea Poupore
OG Guatemala Participant
Project Associate
Oneonta, NY
| Laura Huddart
OG Guatemala Participant
Project Associate
Toronto, ON
| |
| Nichole Trudeau
OG Guatemala Participant
Project Associate
Ottawa, ON
| Eva Tong
OG Guatemala Participant
Project Associate
Vancouver, BC
| |
| Porschia Thomas
OG Guatemala Participant
Project Associate
Ajax, ON
| ||
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