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Showing posts with label Rotary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rotary. Show all posts

Monday, February 23, 2015

Disaster Relief

Once again I have had an eventful and exciting weekend. Friday afternoon I got together with some other exchange students and Argentine tutors to help out in Mendiolaza, an area about 25 minutes from where I live.

For those who haven't heard, Cordoba and the surrounding region received an abnormal amount of rain this month. There was so much rain within a short period of time that some areas were placed under a "state of emergency" and troops were deployed to assist with relief. There was tons of flooding, at least 1,500 houses were effected and around 10 people died (the number hasn't been finalized yet).


People in my area had told me that the rain had been pretty bad but didn't prepare me for what I saw when I got there. With two bridges completely taken out, roads and homes flooded, and many places completely destroyed, there was a desperate need that hasn't been met.

This woman's house was right next to the river, flooding her house and leaving about one foot of mud on top of her front and back yards.

Every house we visited did not have working electricity, they were working to get the water back and running, and everything in the houses had been completely submerged under water. 
Every house had removed everything from inside and placed anything salvageable out in the yards to dry. The rest went into huge trash mounds in front of the houses. 
The families told stories of water reaching chest high, trying to salvage anything, damage to cars, lack of beds, having no clothes, or their children being without basic necessities, and no toys left. 

We found a teddy bear near the river that had been destroyed by the flooding.
One of the saddest parts was that there were very few people around to help. Our large group was able to help but there was still so much to do and some of the only other people were police. At least they were nice and working hard to help. 


The following pictures are from the time we spent in Mendiolaza. We are hoping to go back again this week. There is so much need and so much to be done. 

We worked hard but managed to have fun doing it! 

One of the saddest things I saw. Two young girls carrying donated clothes home. One was shoeless. 

Carrying donated goods 

This woman lost pretty much everything except her dogs, her family, a few plates and some chairs but had a wonderful attitude. She was extremely thankful for the help and when we asked her if there was anything she needed her only response was "We are doing really good. The only thing we could use is shoes but other than that, I think we are fine!" She said that as she was standing in torn clothing in front of her empty, water damaged house that still had standing water in the destroyed kitchen. 


This 2 1/2 year old wanted to be held but would not smile and was not interested in playing. She was scared to be away from me or her mother for any amount of time. 




As typical as Argentina gets, every house had Mate (similar to tea) to offer, even though they didn't have anything else. Everyone that helped was offered Mate. Mate was originally used by the indigenous people in Argentina as a way to help get through a long day of work. The tradition still stands today 

This was the owner of one of the houses she worked on. She was extremely thankful for all the help. She told us that a 4 year old and an 8 month old baby normally live in her house and that they were there when the flooding occurred. 

Saturday, January 31, 2015

Wednesday, Jan. 28, 2015


Day 5

Wednesday I hung out at the house while a repairman came to fix the shower that my host dad somehow managed to break the night before. After it was fixed me and my host sister, Isabella, went to meet up with Krystal, a Rotary exchange student from Florida, at a Japanese restaurant. We spent a few hours chatting and talking about how her exchange was going so far. Afterwards Isabella and I walked around some shopping centers and had afternoon coffee before going home. 

That night I went to my friend Isabelle's house where she had put together a mini party with pudding (a brazilian version of flan), brigadeiro, coixinhas (battered & fried soft bread with chicken inside), bolinhos de queijo (battered & fried balls of cheese), guarana (Brazilian soda) and novela watching.

Monday, January 12, 2015

Giving Back

*Photo property of RYE FL
This weekend I had the opportunity to give back to Rotary Youth Exchange, the program that made my year in Brazil possible. I got to meet the 65 students from Florida who will be spending the 2015-2016 school year in countries all over the world. It feels like yesterday that I was in their shoes but instead I am now the one who supposedly has all the advice and answers. I spent the weekend volunteering at these students' first orientation and seeing how excited and nervous they were about the year ahead of them. Knowing what that year did for me, I can not even begin to explain to them how wonderfully I was impacted, or how much change they will undergo. The experiences they will have will last a lifetime and I was so thankful to have had the chance to meet them and impart some small nuggets of advice on them.

Seven lucky students will be going to Brazil this upcoming year. I met each of them and when it was time to sit down and help decide where in the country each would go, all of the students I met, places I went and experiences I had rushed through my head. I hope that each will find that the place they are located it the absolute best place that they could be. My hope for each of them is that they come out of their experiences with as much love for their city and for the country as I did.

Brazilian flag flying from my boat on the Amazon River