Monday, May 29, 2017

When kids get to be kids

This was a pretty full month for us. Each of us took a two day personal retreat at various times throughout the month and then we ended last week with a team retreat. Our time was spent reflecting on the past, visioning for the future and getting to know each other better. It was our first time away as a team of 7 and my first team retreat. The team here in Xela has been around for 11 years and is starting to enter new frontier with our work with girls and their families. This month we had two activities with the kids outside of our "normal" schedule. We had a chance to take almost 30 kids to play soccer thanks to a group visiting from the states. Everyone was super excited and some of the girls showed up with matching pony tails and color-coordinated outfits. We kept rotating all the kids between the teenage boys and the little 6-7 yr olds so everyone got a chance to play. As a team we realized how important and fun it was for them to have an opportunity to do something outside of their normal routine. Following up on this, yesterday Liz, Chris and I took some of the older girls to play some arcade games in the mall and eat ice cream. Again, they had lots of energy due to their excitement and enjoyed this special outing. While it might seem normal to see a group of pre-teen girls hanging out at the mall, these girls spend 7 days a week working or taking care of siblings. An outing like this is a rare opportunity. A couple hours to act their age, run around laughing and being silly is a fun gift to give them.  We are hoping to do something similar with the younger ones because we have about 7 kids under the age of 9.

Also this month we had a team activity for the community to help raise awareness about the risks of child labor. Each member of the team focused on an area of risk including, teenage pregnancy, human trafficking, crime/violence, sexual harassment, absence from school, drug/alcohol abuse and my topic was child prostitution. We each did research on our topic and were ready to share with passer-byers. It was important to us not just to share statistics, but also share stories of hope from our work with the kids in the park. Helping to humanize the children who are forced to work sometimes starting at the age of 5 or 6 due to economic reasons and sharing that despite this, with love and support they can have a better future and can be an exception to the statistics.  This is why we do the work we do.

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