Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Influence

We were amazed in Arequipa by just how much American culture shows up in Peru. A few examples: American rock music is all over the place - in fact the most common radio station heard is a "Best of the 80s" (interestingly found on 99.1, the same frequency of the Latin music station in Washington). If I had a dollar for every time I heard "Footloose" in the grocery store, or "I Can't Fight this Feeling Anymore" in a taxi....
It also seems to be a selling point to use the names of famous Americans for schools here. I noticed it so much that I had to take pictures. These are all from Arequipa.
First, a taste of home:

Then, a two-for-one - Edison and King:

JFK is also popular here:

A very prestigious colegio:

And my favorite, a beauty and fashion school:

Just so you know, colegio is used for school in general, inicial means preschool, primaria is elementary, and secundaria is high school.

I'm sure we'll observe much more of the unfortunate side of American influence here in Lima - we've already seen McDonald's, Papa Johns, Nautica, Abercrombie, and Starbucks. Tomorrow we're going to spend the morning in Miraflores, so we'll let you know how that goes.

Sunday, October 21, 2007

Still here

Hey friends,
Sorry about the lack of posts. We've had a full house here, though still not one of our own. We're still at the Berrys, having lots of fun, keeping busy. Mark and Lori have been out of town for nearly a week now, so the four kids have been under the charge of all of us on the team. The Rosses were here last week and again today through wednesday, and Laura Hoyt, Becca, and Susan all took turns over the weekend. We have been here throughout, and Noah loves the company. The Ross's have two sweet little girls as well, so at times with 7 kids under the age of 11, it has been quite a zoo!
Our boy is having such a blast, playing with all their toys, and running through the yard all day. This little house is his favorite place.
The girls, horsing around
The Berrys have a new Jack Russell Terrier pup, Noah's new best friend

Emmett, the oldest, helping with banana pancakes on Sunday morning

The girls are even trying to teach Noah to ride!

More posts will come, with more pictures, and more observations on Lima, as we get to know the city....

Sunday, October 14, 2007

Welcome to Lima!

All our language teachers & Concho on our last day
Parties! Peruvians love an excuse to have a party and this week we were it! It was so wonderful to get the chance to formally say thank you and good-bye to all of the people that helped us transition to life in Peru. Bob and Noél Rich (our hosts) took us to the airport and then our good friend Wolfgang from school surprised us, met us there to say good-bye and sent us along with some good Arequipeño chocolate. When we arrived in cloudy and cool Lima, we met our buddy Seth in the baggage claim area! He had just returned from the jungle and was on his way to Arequipa. It was great to see him after he had left language school in July. (Jess- he's doing just fine!)
Mark and his son, Emmett, picked us up from the airport and we arrived at the house an hour later in time for another party! Our whole team and some of the church members were there to welcome us. We had a delicious meal topped off with ice cream cake - a tradition in the Ross family. We were also celebrating Taylor Berry's and Susan Crenshaw's birthdays. Michael wasted no time in getting a futbol game going in their backyard, and Noah wasted no time in getting to know all his new friends and a Jack-Russell Terrier here named Luna. We are really going to enjoy living with the Berrys while we search for a place to live. Noah is so entertained by his new buddies.
This morning, we got to attend the church in Salamanca where we will be working! We are so grateful to finally be here and get to know the community! We have felt so loved both in leaving Arequipa and being welcomed to our new city! Thank you for praying for this step in the process. We have a few more obstacles to work through before feeling at home here, but we can trust that the Lord had gone before us and will help us with each piece of the puzzle.
Our new mailing address is:
Michael or Laura Salvatierra
(Queovadis Estrada)
Apartado 1529
Lima 100
Peru
Queovadis is a man that works for our team and helps us with many things. He will be picking up our mail for us, so if you send a package, put his name on it with ours, and he can pick it up without us having to go as well.

Emmett Berry, Enrique's daughters

Kayla Ross, Abigail Berry, Bella Ross, Anna Berry, Noah, & Taylor Berry

Friday, October 12, 2007

Leaving!

Wow, we have been running around like crazy people. We leave for Lima tomorrow! It’s hard to believe how fast 7 months have flown by, and harder still to imagine not seeing all of the Peruvians and extranjeros who have become so dear to us here. It has been a week of despedidas (goodbyes) and logistics. We took our hosts, Bob and Noel out on Tuesday, and last night we got to go out to dinner with the two directors of the institute and their wives. Today we had our despedida at the institute, complete with empanadas and gift exchange, and tonight we will go out with some of our student friends. In between, we have packed up the apartment and run around the city on last-minute errands. We’re exhausted.

One more thing we wanted to post before making the move and signing off for a few days: It has been remarkable just how many of our friends’ families have grown since we arrived in Peru. So many babies! We never took the time to congratulate them on the blog, and welcome these beautiful new lives into the world! We wish we could meet them in person, but thankfully many have blogs of their own, so we've been able to see pictures. Here they are, in no particular order:

Titus Powers, to Andrew and Karly
Trinity Iverson, to Danny and Kimberly
Macey Mitchell, to Scott and Andi
Liam Chase, to Matt and Carly
Nora Prather, to Justin and Jacquie
Ephraim Aday, to Adam and Catherine
Eve Rider, to Tyler and Becky
Luke Secrest, to Scott and Tori
Josiah Beardsley, to Matt and Laurie
Mary Catherine Munsell, to Joe and Cathy
Grace Mattson, to Dan and Marianne
Dallas Lacy, to Darryl and Lindsay
Nathanael Conyers, to Brian and Allison
Uzoamaka Ezejiofor, to Ifeoma and Ike
Jude Lookabill, to Josh and Tabitha
Grace Bingham, to Brandon and Sarah

Congratulations to all!!
We’ll write as soon as we can from Lima.

Thursday, October 11, 2007

A Confession....

I understand that from a missiological perspective, and from the perspective of seeking unity and solidarity with those among whom we will be ministering, meals and food are important. These are symbols of community, and it is best in building relationships to learn to eat as those in the community eat, where they eat, in the way they eat, on the budget with which they eat. And I frankly do get annoyed with American travellers who, upon arrival abroad, head for the nearest familiar fast-food chain. I also realize the many problems caused by multinational corporations, the way mega-stores can destroy local businesses and hurt the community in general. And finally I acknowledge that franchising one culture as such is exactly what we DON'T want to do as we work with churches here in Peru.
So with all that in mind, I have to confess....Domino's recently opened a store in Arequipa; we caved and went the other day, and it sure was (shamefully) delicious.

Monday, October 08, 2007

Hospital General

On Friday, I had the opportunity to visit a state hospital here in Arequipa. Thankfully, it wasn’t because someone we knew was there. One of our teachers, Edgar, and I had been talking recently in class about the health system here, and I told him that I really wanted to see a hospital. Michael and Edgar’s wife, Julie, watched Noah and their 3-year-old, Sebastian, while Edgar and I went to visit Hospital General.
Edgar is actually a Biologist, but teaching English is what pays the bills. So, he knew a few people that worked in the hospital from his university days. Unfortunately, none of them were working that day, but he had another motive to visit as well. His mom is on dialysis and he needed to donate blood on her behalf.
The basic, concrete structure is at least 40 years old, but seems as though no repairs have been made on it since the day it was built. There are six floors and a basement, and on several floors you see broken windows – cheap ventilation, I guess. We tried to enter through the Emergency room to get to the blood bank, just one floor above, but of course we had to walk around to the other side of the building to get there. In the Emergency room, though, it is the secretary that is doing the triaging, not even a nurse. Once she determines what problem you’re having, they let you pass through the door to pay upfront for services you haven’t received yet.
Edgar talked to the lady in the blood bank, who gave him 2 orders/receipts, one to buy the equipment for the collection, and another for the lab processing – bills adding up to over 200 soles (about $60). I honestly don’t know if you need to do the same thing in the States if you are donating specifically for someone, BUT I always thought donating blood should be free. Then she told us we needed to walk back to the Emergency room cashier to give proof that items would be paid for – confusing to me, it all seemed like pointless paper-passing, and the guy receiving them didn’t know what to do, just put a rubber stamp on them and we were on our way to explore the rest of the hospital.
One thing that continually surprised me as we walked through the hospital, was the lack of patient privacy. Edgar showed me the laboratory where, through the window, there is an envelope filled with lab results of patients. If your family member was in an emergency, you could come, reach through the window and find the lab results of your family member, or anyone else’s for that matter. We took the one functioning elevator (out of 4) to the 2nd floor and walked down the dingy, dimly lit halls. This was the pediatric unit. On one side there were rooms that had up to six patients in them and the other side had private rooms. At the end of the hall was the nurse’s station (there’s only 1 on duty for about 40 patients), with a list of all the patients’ names, room number, even their category of illness – there for anyone to see. Past the station was a large room filled with more patients, three sections of two sides, with six patients in each side. If the family wanted to bring a T.V. from home to make things a little better, they could. If the family wanted to buy/bring a pitcher for water and cups, they could. Truly nothing is really provided except an old bed and sheets that are often ripped or sewn back together and meals (those didn’t appear to be exactly gourmet, either). You even need to bring your own towels and toilet paper. I peeked inside the bathroom (yes, just one for the unit) to find an enormous pile of soiled linens in the corner. But, these patients are only paying about $5 a day to stay there, if they can afford it, otherwise they pay nothing at all – which I believe is the majority. Without family members to do all the buying of medicines and supplies needed, they have nothing. And, of course, if your loved one is in the hospital, you can’t go to work and you will not be paid any sick leave.
We passed the surgery unit, where families were just lining the halls waiting from any word about their loved ones – no waiting rooms. For deliveries, fathers are still not permitted to be with their wives, they just pace up and down the halls just like in old movies. We passed through the burn unit, which, not-surprisingly was exactly like the other ones we had seen – not particularly clean with only rudimentary equipment. We did notice that they were constructing a new ICU, which looked like it would be an improvement.
Before we left, Edgar ran to return the papers to the Blood Bank, while I waited outside the emergency room door. I noticed their two ambulances, one of which was a Land Rover, clearly from the “M.A.S.H.” era, the other a Chevy Van from the 80s, but I suppose they serve their purpose. I watched as one young patient, in a wheel chair with an IV, was pushed to the curb as they waited for the taxi. She had a blanket around her head and her arm was in a sling. When the taxi pulled up, they removed the blanket to reveal a bandage around her head; she could barely stand. Something happened inside me and before I knew it I was helping her get into the car, along with her mother and a tech that was with them. All I could say was, “Que Dios le bendiga!” as I closed her door.With all the pain I saw in that hospital, God truly is the only one that can give them hope beyond the sufferings of this world. They surely can’t rely on the government, or the health system to do it for them.

Saturday, October 06, 2007

Rafting Fun

For our last weekend in Arequipa, we decided to do one more outdoor adventure and went rafting with a group of friends from school. Michael went 2 weeks ago with another group from school and said that I would really enjoy it. As we talked it up at school, there were more that were interested, including another mommy who couldn't go the 1st time, so we set it up. I put Noah down for his nap after a fun-filled morning at the park for Daddy's last fútbol game, so he was asleep when our sitter arrived, a dear friend from church here.

We drove about a 1/2 hour up the Río Chili, the river that goes through Arequipa. (We started in the same area where we went hiking with Erin Houlihan back in July - just in case your reading, Erin) What a blast!! I have never done rafting before and this was a perfect course for beginners. There were mostly class 2 and 3 rapids with one class 4, for all you rafting pros out there. Yes, we got soaking wet in very cold mountain water. Those suits we were wearing were definitely not waterproof, but they did help against the breeze after being so wet. Michael, however, got much colder than I did after deciding to jump from a big rock at one of our breaks.
It felt so great to get to do something adventurous together! We decided it would be great fun to take a family rafting trip together when Noah (and the others (c:) are older.
Above: Dorothy(Germany, the other mommy), Miriam(Germany), us, Todd & Stephanie (US), Alex (US), Frank (our guide)

Friday, October 05, 2007

One Week

Yikes, more than a week since our last post. I'm finally getting on the computer to try to get back into some communication, including putting pictures up on facebook and writing some emails. I've also edited the blog links on the right - added some, removed others, and tried to make it more user-friendly with categories. If anyone can tell me why the font changes partway down, and how to fix it, let me know. I know there's a lot, and one might think I spend all day reading blogs, but I just take a little time once a week to catch up on as much as I can. It really helps us feel much more connected to our friends and to the rest of the world.

I promise more posts in the future - this week should include a hospital visit, recent pictures, a book review, and lots of babies!
It's hard to believe that in one week we will be on our way to Lima!