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Archive | Jamaica

EM partners with Catadupa leaders

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EM partners with Catadupa leaders


jamaica-067Just beyond the beaches and resorts of Montego Bay, Jamaica, people are struggling to maintain a basic living in the small rural town of Catadupa. Experience Mission has been bringing volunteer teams to Catadupa for the past 6 years, and Executive Director Chris Clum first visited the community about 15 years ago. EM staff member Josh Gray spent two summers in Catadupa while in college and is currently EM’s primary contact for Catadupa leaders. During their time in Jamaica, Clum and Gray began to see that lasting change in the community was not going to be achieved just by bringing mission teams. A more strategic approach was needed.

The Catadupa Community Development Committee (CCDC) was formed in 2008 consisting of a team of Catadupa residents, and it exists to confront the needs of the community. It focuses on improving the community in various areas including health, education, and business. The current priority of CCDC members is developing agriculture, but without any significant resources or even a functioning office, they have been able to make little tangible progress.

In the fall of 2009, Gray and Leroy Gordon, local pastor and CCDC president, began discussing the community vision for economic development through agriculture, and since then EM has been partnering with the CCDC to assist in raising funds. The CCDC members are driving the vision, and they possess an in depth knowledge of local agriculture, but EM has a network of connections with people and organizations from the US who have resources. EM is committed to leveraging its time and resources to assist the community of Catadupa, and the CCDC will continue with the necessary on the ground research and planning.

The CCDC’s strategy for agricultural development is all about collaboration. There are many capable farmers in the community, but they lack the knowledge and resources to market their products. Even if they find a market, such as a hotel in Montego Bay, they lack any means for transporting their crops, and in most cases do not produce a sufficient quantity for the hotels to take notice. The CCDC intends to unite local farmers so that they can together produce sufficient quantities, and then provide a mechanism for contracting with hotels and transporting products. The farmers will sell to the CCDC, and it will in turn fulfill its contracts and transport the products to Montego Bay. CCDC profits will be used to sustain the program, provide supplies for the farmers, and fund other community initiatives.

The goal is to create opportunity. Gordon states, “One of the things about farming is that if you’re gonna plant you need market, so the CDC, we come together as a group, and what we want to do is to create the kind of a vehicle or the opportunity where we can provide the market for the farmers, and identify the market so when they plant their product they know exactly where, who they’ll be selling it to, and the price they will be getting from that.” Gordon explains that many farmers only sell to an occasional friend or neighbor, so he hopes that they can plant on a larger scale. He states, “There are more persons who will go into farming if bringing their product from point A to point B and getting a high return was possible.”

It’s been a long road for the people of Catadupa. Originally settled by runaway slaves, Catadupa was traditionally a farming community, but in the late 1800s the island’s main railway was extended to Montego Bay, and the resulting railroad line passed right through the center of the town. It became a primary source of employment and provided a consistent influx of tourists who were ready to purchase handmade clothing and crafts from local artisans. The train became the life of the town, and it provided a much needed connection to the outside world for nearly a hundred years. This all changed in the early 1990’s when the train was unexpectedly shutdown. The town was devastated; its economy and way of life had been destroyed overnight.

Today, the train station is dilapidated, the railroad tracks are covered in weeds, and the only local businesses area are a few poorly stocked shops. Without a market for their products, farmers struggle just to maintain basic necessities such as food, shelter and clothing. Most people live a life of abject poverty. While EM and other NGO’s have accomplished many projects, these fail to address the root cause of the poverty in Catadupa. A grassroots movement that will provide economic opportunity may be the only hope for Catadupa. This is why the locally led agricultural program is so important.

Both EM staff and CCDC members agree that the first step is to build a community resource center. This will serve as a platform for community collaboration, and it will include a functioning modern office for the CCDC. Noel Atkinson, a member of the committee, sees the establishment of a resource center with agricultural development as the number one priority for the community. He explains, “The potential is there for development, but as I said the whole thing is to get the resource center working, and alongside of that, we want to encourage the farmers now to get back into farming so that, you know, we can have some economic activity in the area. That would improve the standard of living.” Atkinson is a retired farmer who lives in Catadupa, and he has years of civic and industrial experience with a US corporation.

EM hopes to raise $40,000 for the construction of the resource center, and $50,000 for the development of agriculture by spring of 2011.

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Jamaica Mission Trips 2011



Come with Experience Mission to Jamaica. We have mission trips for all ages.

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Gettin Clean, Jamaican Style

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Gettin Clean, Jamaican Style


Find Your Caribbean Mission Trip
www.experiencemission.org

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Kids Club in the Mountains of Jamaica

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Kids Club in the Mountains of Jamaica


Find a Jamaica Mission Trip
www.experiencemission.org

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More of Mo’s photos from Jamaica

More of Mo’s photos from Jamaica


 

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Cement work in Jamaica

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Cement work in Jamaica


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Jamaica relationships highlight trips’ purpose

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Jamaica relationships highlight trips’ purpose


Every day here we see the beautiful kids in this community.  Whether it be one of the hundreds of kids that came through Kids Club, the children playing with us during breakfast in the morning before they had to run to school, or simply those whose home we were building a toilet for.  They were all beautiful, but some we truly made a connection with.  And one of the girls from our last team made an amazing connection with these three little girls in the community of Cambridge. And for this story I asked her to tell it:

“When I came to Jamaica I expected to be working hard for Christ – getting in the mud and shoveling dirt, being His hands and feet. I never expected that my service would be spending time with a group of three small girls – Kimmy, Kacey, and Tiana. Throughout the week we taught each other games, blew bubbles, and just sat and talked. Every time they saw me come off the bus their faces lit up and it put a joy in my heart that I had never felt before. We grew so close as the days went on and it felt as though we would always be together, as though I would never have to leave them.

“Then the last day came and the tears started to fall. Seeing these girls cry made me hurt inside and I spent most of that day comforting them and holding them. As I was getting on the bus, the girls handed me two pieces of paper and we said our last goodbyes. We were headed back to the school where we were staying and everyone else was watching ‘Remember the Titans,’ but I was sitting there crying. The girls had written me a goodbye letter and a poem.

“The relationships God helped us build during this mission trip to Jamaica were incredible and everyone will remember the friends they made, whether they were elderly adults who just needed someone to talk to or small children who just wanted a playmate and someone to hold them. I will keep Kimmy, Kacey, and Tiana in my heart and in my prayers always, and I thank God for putting each one of them in my life,”

- Annabel

It is because of relationships like the ones Annabel made with those three little girls that we are here serving and working.  It is awesome to be able to serve by meeting the physical needs of the people surrounding us but I truly believe that the world will change when it sees the love of Christ in its relationships.  That is why we serve.

Until All Know,

Nathan Heath

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School construction draws Jamaicans’ support

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School construction draws Jamaicans’ support


By Mo Scarpelli

In a small Jamaican mountainside community, a crowd of children gathered around 9 a.m. on the hill overlooking the Barnett Bush basic school.

School got out two weeks ago. But this was more entertaining.

“Will you ever quit?” the children heard Experience Mission leaders yell below them with shovels deep in the dirt.

“No! We want some more!” a crew of college students screamed back amid smiles and laughs as they hauled buckets of sand, maul and stone down a mountainside.

The children giggled and watched from above, and soon made their way down to play near their old school. Several even picked up shovels and started helping alongside the volunteers.

Experience Mission, with the help of local Jamaicans, formed several layers of the foundation for a new basic school for Barnett Bush in just four days.

But their impression on the locals meant something much more.

“You could move just a stone and they’ll cheer you on so much that you think you could move a boulder,” said Dean Bailey, a 19-year-old Jamaican living in the nearby Catadupa community, where he has helped EM since teams started arriving in early June. “That doesn’t happen around here–the people were really excited about it.”

Bailey and several other locals have spent their days helping with EM projects and getting to know volunteers in Catadupa, a community of around 3,000 people.

“Working with Jamaicans, I think it made me work a little harder,” said 19-year-old EM volunteer Courtney Werkheiser of Claxton, Georgia. “You learn a lot more about Jamaica because you aren’t just working next to them, you are becoming friends with them and hearing their stories.”

Pastor Leroy Gordon of the Christian Fellowship Church in Catadupa initiated the basic school project. In December, he visited the Barnett Bush basic school to find out how he could help with the school’s crumbling structure.

“It’s a dilapidated building, we needed something new,” said Cecile Clarke, principal of the school for the last eleven years. “The government does not fund basic school so early childhood gets forgotten.”

The building’s colorful walls were once formed from only slabs of zinc over a dirt floor, like many houses in rural Jamaica. The community then built walls of wood and poured cement floors, but the building was still too small and uncomfortable for students and teachers.

“Some parents don’t even want to send their kids because it’s so bad,” said Clarke. “If they are privileged and have the money, they will send their children to the city to go to school on a bus. But many do not have the money.”

At any one time, an average of sixteen students, ages three to six, attend the one-room schoolhouse that has been standing for more than sixty years. Teachers estimate thirty or forty more would come if the building were more suitable for learning.

Clarke says the entire community is excited about the construction.

“Man, when this building go up, man, it’s going to make a difference,” Clarke said, smiling. “It’s been a long time coming. They need this better facility, it’s a good, good thing.”

Beyond the building’s functionality, Clarke’s two biggest concerns for the area are early-age literacy and nutritional education.

Clarke says many parents in the area are illiterate.

“But even if the parents can’t read, they want their children to read,” said Clarke. “They understand children are the key to the future and they must start learning early.”

Nutritional education, however, does not have much support at home. Clarke says this is a direct result of poverty, as healthy foods are too expensive for those struggling with money. She brings lunch for the children several times a week, just to keep them coming to school.

EM volunteers brought their lunch everyday to the worksite, and some shared with their young audience when they could. Others snapped pictures, blew bubbles and played jump rope with the little ones on their breaks.

“These people are willing to move from out of their comfort zone and help other people,” said Bailey. “The Jamaicans that watch say, ‘Hey, these people are really on fire for God, they’re serving like God would serve us.’ It’s really awesome.”

“It’s cool when you work at the school and think about the building it’s going to make for kids to go to school, but it’s also cool to think it’s going to be a place for lots of mission trips like ours to come and stay as well,” said Werkheiser. “From what I’ve heard, the mentality in Jamaica is that if you don’t get paid you don’t want to work, because people need money here. But I think it’s more motivating for them that we’ve come just to work and have fun. Hopefully they’ll help out after we’re gone,.”

Jamaican locals estimate the school will be finished completely in the next several months, depending on community support.

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Mo’s photos from Jamaica

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Mo’s photos from Jamaica


Check out these photos journalism intern Mo Scarpelli snapped in Jamaica.

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Fish and loaves in Jamaica

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Fish and loaves in Jamaica


“God, we ask for fish and loaves.”  It was a humble prayer from three young men who had no other way to solve the problem of enough food than to pray. It was all we had.

Last Saturday, we picked up our new mission teams as they arrived into Montego Bay.  We all then made our way back to Catadupa, with some of our new arrivals feeling very excited and tired but all of them hungry.  After arriving in Catadupa everyone settled, set up their beds and we sat down to eat.  As the food was set out on the table Stu, Luke, and myself found ourselves facing a huge problem, there was no way there was enough food.

It was an issue we had feared and we were seeing it come true in a big way.  We had almost 50 people for this mission trip, worn out and tired from traveling and we had so little food to feed them with. We immediately began to reassess the situation, talking to the cooks, and trying to figure out how to get enough food for this many people.  Everywhere we turned we received the same answer: “Yah mon, we need more time fer de food.” But we had no time.

So we did all we could. The three of us huddled together in an empty sanctuary, prayed, and lifted up to God a situation that was bigger than ourselves, but not as big as Him. And the people ate.  Table by table they filled their plates and we watched as they finished.  And it was crazy–there was food left over.  Everyone was full and we still had food.  So we took what was left over and headed home for the night.  The three of us were starving from the day’s work.  But we couldn’t eat all of the food.  I have no other way of explaining it.  It had to be a miracle.

Please keep us in your prayers!

Until all know,

Nathan Heath

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