Honduras

By Kalona News
Posted 3/25/99

Last summer, when a group of people from East Union Mennonite Church signed up to travel to Honduras on a work mission this February, they expected to be doing regular maintenance and repairs at …

This item is available in full to subscribers.

Please log in to continue

E-mail
Password
Log in

Honduras

Posted

Last summer, when a group of people from East Union Mennonite Church signed up to travel to Honduras on a work mission this February, they expected to be doing regular maintenance and repairs at Shalom Retreat Center in the capital city of Tegucigalpa. Knowing the economy of Honduras is poor, they anticipated rather rough conditions and were ready for some hard work. What they did not anticipate, though, was Hurricane Mitch.

Mitch, called by U.S. National Security Advisor Sandy Berger “the most destructive natural disaster ever to hit the Western Hemisphere,” struck Honduras, Nicaragua, El Salvador and Guatemala late last October, killing more than 9,000 people and leaving thousands more homeless. In Honduras, the torrential rains of October and November caused massive mudslides that washed out roads and bridges and buried homes.

Shalom, a place not unlike Crooked Creek Camp in Washington, is a retreat run by the Mennonite Church. It’s available for rent to families, businesses or church groups for meetings, retreats, reunions or other gatherings. The mission of theworkers from Kalona was to perform maintenance and remodeling to camp buildings to ready them to house relief workers who will come to repair the damage caused by the hurricane.

The East Union group, James Boller, Ruth Boller, Loren Hochstedler, Elvesta Hochstedler, Alvin J. Miller, Jim Miller, Mary Anna Miller, Mary Helen Miller, Nelson Miller, Chris Rhodes, Aaron Schrock, Doug Stoltzfus and Gaylord Yoder, arrived in Honduras Monday, February 8. Unfortunately, their luggage didn’t arrive until Thursday, February 11. Looking forward to warmer weather than they were leaving behind in Iowa, they were unprepared for the cool temperatures found at 5,000 feet above sea level. A trip to a second-hand clothing store provided some needed changes of clothing.

Living conditions at the retreat were cruder than the Iowans were used to. Water for showers was heated by running it past a 220-volt electrical wire. A native woman was hired to do the laundry for the group, washing the clothes outdoors and scrubbing them by hand.

While the Honduran countryside is beautiful, abject poverty is everywhere. During a power outage one evening, the East Union contingent sat around a campfire with MCC workers, and learned some sobering facts about the county. Six million people live in Honduras, most of them in the capital city. The illiteracy rate is almost 100 percent and four percent of the children die from malnutrition every year.

A poor country before Mitch blew in, the devastation left in his wake was tremendous. Bridges, roads and buildings were washed completely away by the flooding and mudslides. Floodwater left indelible marks on the sides of buildings as reminders of how deep it had been. Homes and other buildings left standing were filled with mud and debris.

A large part of Honduras’ economy is based on the export of bananas, coffee and other crops. The hurricane wiped out many of the banana trees, leaving the ground useless, because, the Iowans were told, where bananas have been planted, nothing else will grow.

Many of the native people make their living by growing vegetables and fruits and selling them in the street markets of the cities. During Hurricane Mitch, several of these street vendors lost not only their homes in the rural areas, but the markets where they sold their produce. The Hondurans are a resilient people, though, and street markets are being reestablished.

It will take many years for Honduras to rebuild what Hurricane Mitch destroyed in a few hours. Thirteen people from the Kalona area did their part last month to hurry the recovery along.