With its hardships and poverty Bolivia is ripe ground for "development" and, reminiscent of Africa, there are plenty of well meaning big name western NGOs here, their logos branding many water tanks, schools and health clinics as you drive the rugged dusty roads around the altiplano, their big white SUVs sit proudly in the cities, "we're here saving you!"... the same mistakes being made the world over. Travelling these same broken roads in a local transport van, crammed in between two elderly Bolivian women and an agricultural engineer working for QBL, I felt that there was really something different about the way that Quaker Bolivia Link operates here. QBL was set up by a group of Quakers who visited Bolivia on a study tour, as a response to the abject poverty that they witnessed in Bolivia's rural areas. The organisation employs mainly local Bolivian technicians to work with rural community groups for solutions to the root causes of their poverty - lack of accessible clean water, lack of fertile land for growing nutritious food, lack of education, lack of inclusion. The technicians visit the completed projects every few months to ensure their efficiency and I accompanied three technicians over an exhausting three days to visit some of the projects and to experience the reality of Bolivian life.
Historically, this community of 72 families had accessed its fresh water from small dirty rivers, giving rise to disease and dehydration (the rivers are dry for a large part of each year) and, of course, lack of nutritious food as the barren, dry land struggles to produce only a meagre crop of potatoes and quinoa. QBL technicians worked with the community to develop a water system which accesses fresh water from ground water sources in the hills and using a system of underground pipelines based on gravity to direct the water current, pipes the water to a tap situated outside each families house. The beautiful part of the project is that it is based on community involvement - the community supplied all the manual labour for the installation of the pipes and QBL provided the technicians and the financing. A community committee is also created, changing on a monthly rotational basis, to administer the project and ensure its effective running, and the current president of the committee showed me around the houses, eagerly turning on every family's tap to show the beautiful stream of clear, clean water. He busily explained to me the system of pipelines under the ground, his pride in being involved in the construction evidently apparent on his kind, weathered face - "I worked with these hands!" he exclaimed, explaining to me that as the system uses gravity for propulsion, there is no running cost for the system, and therefore no cost to the community for their daily water. We walked the dusty ground between each house, each family rushing out to greet us "Gracias, gracias Senorita Ingeniera!" (no matter how many times I explained that I was not an engineer!).
What really impressed me about the project was the lack of its obviousness - the taps beared no logos, no branding, there was no sense of dependency from the community members, only a huge sense of pride and local ownership of the project. When we arrived at the last home in the community, exhausted from the whipping winds and hot sun, an elderly man rushed out "Bienvenido Senorita Ingeniera!", his lined face was so bright, his eyes sparkled, and a huge (toothless) smile erupted as he ushered me to a chair in his one room adobe hut, explaining how grateful the community was for the water supply, and quickly brought out a meal of hot red potatoes and fresh salty cheese for us - it was the most touching example of generosity I have ever experienced. Here, in the harshest of landscapes, these people, who have nothing, will give so unhesitatingly, so warmly. He brought us bottles of local coca cola (quina cola) to drink and was so pleased to watch us enjoy this humble, delicious meal. I was truly touched by this gesture of such genuine kindness.
Visiting these communities with the QBL technicians was a hugely empowering and positive experience for me; finally, development without dependency, assistance without ideology, finance without strings, without branding, without publicity. The projects were humble, were community driven, were "owned" by the families involved, and were needed. To think that a small sum of money, like $500, can install a greenhouse to provide an entire family of eight or nine nutritious food, and a small surplus that can be sold or traded at the local market. Simple solutions that really make a difference to the lives of these warm and gracious people.
2 comments:
Sounds like these are hard working and proud people. Goes to show the poorest aren't always the laziest. they have been denied the ladders of opportunity which their leaders extend only to their friends and cronies.
Sounds Like a cool place, It must be morbidly entertaining spotting all the trademarks "helping" the world.
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