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Bea’s produces fruit in Guatemala
By Paula Moore, KP News
For many years motorists coming out
to the Key Peninsula have seen the signs, “BEA’S FLOWERS
U-PICK.” At Bea’s home on Creviston Road, there grow row
after row of gorgeous dahlias, of every color and size.
The Morrison family just leave a jar for people picking
the flowers to leave their contribution. This gives owner
Bea Morrison extra pocket money to help the family, plus
fulfills her love of flowers and for gardening.
But the impact of the money left
behind by customers for the beautiful dahlias goes far
beyond the Key Peninsula — it travels the globe on a
special mission the Morrison family has adopted.
Several years ago Morrison and her
daughter, Linda Brewer, were presented with World Vision’s
adopt-a-child program at their church, Chapel Hill
Presbyterian in Gig Harbor. They asked for a little girl
in Guatemala. Bea said, “We didn’t even know where
Guatemala was, maybe an island?” They received a packet
asking them to give money to a girl named “Silvia.” The
whole family enjoyed writing to her, sending her money and
some day hoped they could meet her. Letter after letter,
hope became an exciting goal. But they wondered how they
could ever earn enough money to make such a trip.
In the meantime, the family heard
about Argos, a nonprofit foundation founded by Skip Li, a
diplomat’s son, who wanted to build the lives of Mayan
Indian descendants instead of seeing them destroyed by the
military war that raged during 1980-90. His vision was a
five- to seven-year plan, where the natives, with other
people’s help, would buy land and develop it into a
self-sustaining village. Then this group would pay back
the money borrowed, and it would be given to a new group
to build another village. The Program is called “A Journey
with a Village.”
Bea and Linda with her sister, Carla
Cameron, and aunt, Linda Wilcox, were excited. They
would’ve really wanted to help the village, La Esperanza,
meaning in Spanish “The Hope.” Perhaps if they went to
Guatemala to help this village they could also visit
Silvia.
They began to brainstorm on how to
finance such a trip, and came up with the idea to set up a
flower and produce stand, selling their flowers and
produce from the local area. This money would go toward
sending the four of them to Guatemala. After three years
of hard work and prayer, the group left in January 2004
with people from three area churches to see their dream
come true.
In Guatemala, the women saw cities
with old and beautiful buildings that were in complete
contrast with the malnourished and always hungry people
and animals. Each day the group had breakfast, got into
trucks and rode out to the villages to do hands-on work
with the natives. Their work consisted of helping the
women pick corn, their main food source for the year, real
backbreaking work. The women have to do it because most of
the men are away working in the coffee fields to bring
home for the winter a mere pittance of pay.
Other manual labor included helping
repair roads so villagers could get back and forth to the
market to sell their wares. Part of the group examined
people and gave out glasses. All was not work, but time
was taken to get to know the families, play with the
children, put on skits and give out musical instruments to
help the school.
Brewer said, “Wow, we had fun! We
sang some songs and the kids played their instruments in a
discordant, yet joyful din.”
Despite all their hardships,
tragedies, and heartache of the war years, with many
barely surviving, the people were always open, friendly
and generously shared all they had with the group from
America.
After the four women finished their
project with Argos, they still had one more goal to
fulfill. They would go to see Silvia and her family. This
visit was a happy but sad time.
The World Vision leader informed them
that Silvia’s family, which had been separated many times,
was now together. But the job working for a farmer barely
gave them enough money to survive and a shack to live in.
Everyone was malnourished and their 2-year-old son was so
ill that he might die if the family were forced to move
again. This could happen at any time, depending on the
whim of the owner of the farm. The meeting was climactic.
Silvia and her siblings were dressed in their best
clothes, food given by the village was cooked and shared,
and a holiday atmosphere pervaded the small home. The
family was so glad to meet the women who were helping
them. The father, especially, was overwhelmed they had
actually come and wanted to share in his family’s life. He
had never known anything but poverty, sadness and fear,
since he was left an orphan at 5 when the army killed his
whole family.
He asked how they came to pick
Silvia. Brewer answered, “We didn’t, and God did. And He
provided a way for us to come and see her.” After giving
the family a gift of a Bible, they had to leave. But each
woman was wondering how they could help this family even
more.
When the World Vision representative
told them it would take $1,000 to buy land for a home and
World Vision would provide the building material and
labor, the women really got excited. Returning home, they
were so fired up that they, with their church, had a plant
sale that raised the money for Silvia and her family. Due
to delays, Silvia’s family just received their new home in
July of this year. Their second plant sale this year
provided Argos with nearly $1,600 to buy medical equipment
for their clinic.
However, the four women did not rest
on their laurels, but continued throughout the summers to
sell flowers and produce to earn enough money to go on
their second trip of love to Guatemala. They will leave in
January. Again they will be working with Argos in La
Esperanza. Because of Hurricane Stan and the resulting
mudslide that killed over 1,400 people, they thought they
would not get to see Silvia and her new home. But they
have been given the green light to go ahead with their
plans.
“Our awareness of people in a Third
World country and how much material things we have in this
country that we can share with others has been
heightened,” said Brewer.
Whenever or wherever these women see
dahlias, they will be reminded of Guatemala and how they
were able to help its people produce fruit in their own
lives.
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News, all rights reserved.
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