Con nos maestros
We loaded up the open air truck and sang "This Is the Day that the Lord Has Made" all the way up to the base camp for the zip lining company. After signing our lives away, they drove us up to the first zip line and got us all fitted for our gear. We each did two zip lines, and my first one went a little something like this:
*video to come when I have a computer 😬*
The setting was absolutely unbelievable, and the canyon we got to look over as we zipped was indescribable. These pictures do it no justice!
We snagged the photos of each person and some chocolate at the bottom and rode back into town. We had 10 very quick minutes to change into business casual to prepare for our next engagement. The team was split into 2, and the first group left almost immediately to tour Bimbo, a multinational baking company. I was on the Village of Hope team, and we discussed our itinerary for the afternoon over some quick crepes at the hotel.
There had been some miscommunication about our involvement with Village of Hope, which is why we ended up not spending the entire week working with Todd and Amy, the couple that founded and runs the orphanage. I was so grateful to get to visit this organization and witness first hand the unbelievable impact this family is making on this community and this country as a whole. Adoption from Guatemala was closed to the US and Canada in 2008 due to complete lack of restrictions and abuse of the system. Tragically, this means that adoptions dropped from 5,000 a year to 75 in the first year of the restriction. This means then, that Todd and Amy's endeavor is anything but short term. It is unlikely these children will ever be adopted. With this in mind, their mission is to create a home for all of the children on site. Families from the surrounding community are brought in and invited to live in the Village of Hope homes to raise their own children while also caring for 6-8 orphans. The orphans grow up in a home, they are raised by a family, much like foster care. The fathers of the families are employed by VoH and the mothers have nannies that help them with the children each day. One of the four houses is set aside for the teen mothers and their babies. These girls are 12-16 years old and raising infants.
I'm getting ahead of myself. Back to the narrative. We arrived at VoH after a slight detour by our faithful van driver that planted us in the yard of some sort of school and ended in us backing down a hill to do a three point turn in their soccer field. All while the video camera is capturing all of this out the window. Might have looked slightly sketchy in any American school. Anyway, we found our way to VoH and Jason got set up to teach a financial management class to some of the employees, with the help of a few members of our team. In the meantime, Todd took Kelly, Jackie, Amie, and me on a tour of the complex. The disparity between the villages we drove through to get to the orphanage and the campus itself was astounding. They have literally carved this tiny community out of a hill, complete with a school, homes, playground, garden, and rooms for mission teams to stay in. We got to meet some of the families in their homes, then Jackie and Amie went back into the office to teach the Bible study they had prepared on a whim to the teenage kids. I floated between both teaching sessions and just took in all the work that Todd and Amy have done in less than 3 years.
There are some big dreams for this place, and while they are not lacking in physical help (they have 12 teams coming 12 weeks in a row this summer), any organization like this one could always benefit from financial assistance. If you want to learn more about Village of Hope and Todd and Amy's limitless vision, I would encourage you to visit their website or Facebook page.
I wish we could have spent days here, learning more about the heart and story behind Village of Hope.
We drove back into Antigua to change for dinner at La Tortilla, a cooking school just a few blocks from our hotel. We made a delicious authentic Guatemalan dish with a very sweet and talented Guatemalan woman and our Hungarian translator. This was probably one of my favorite tourist experiences of anywhere I've ever traveled! Thanks to Claire Allen and Shauna Niequist, I have developed this deep love for gathering around the table, especially when so much heart and meaning has been poured into the meal on the table. There is just nothing sweeter than breaking bread (or tortillas) with the community God has ordained and orchestrated.
We left full and happy, tired and ready for some rest to prepare us for the volcano hike on Friday morning. Our last day will be one of adventure and soaking in our last bit of Guatemalan culture before we board the plane before the sun is even thinking about coming up on Saturday.


























































