Friday, July 27, 2012

Announcements for Week ending August 4th

√ St. Michael’s Sunday School of Theology continues Sundays at 9 AM in the Womble Library. Right now we are watching Jesus and the Gospels, a series of lectures on DVD by Prof. Luke Timothy Johnson a former Benedictine monk and former teacher at Yale Divinity School. The course places the writing of the Gospels in the literary, religious, cultural and historical context of first century Palestine and the Greco-Roman world. All are welcome to watch these videos and join in the lively discussions that follow.

√ √ St. Michael’s Contemplative Prayer Group is organizing to begin again on Saturday, September 8. We will meet 9:30 – 11:00 am each Saturday in Our Lady of The Desert House of Prayer, north of the church. Parking is on the west side of the house.  Come join the group and learn about Christian meditation and enjoy a short social time together. You will find it relaxing, peaceful and rewarding.

√ The summer is hot and the need is great. St. Michael’s Food Pantry is running low on: peanut butter, juices, fruit, tuna fish, pork and beans and cereal. We continue to be grateful for your generous donations to the pantry for those less fortunate. Donate only if your circumstances will allow. Thank You for your continued generosity.

Thursday, July 26, 2012

Update From Guatemala

From Ila in Guatemala...

Guatemala --funds from Rector's discretionary AND for last trimester 

NANCY, Could you do a bulletin announcement thanking everyone for their extra support and letting them know part of the funds will be used for needed tires for the ONE CPR-Sierra vehicle, which will be trundling us and supplies around on spectacularly bad roads?

Meanwhile, we have had to do more consultas than I would have liked, but some were anything but routine:
  • woman with a heart defect that never would have been detected if we hadn't insisted on vital signs for all patients (just to show cooperation, Gustavo the health promoter discovered an irregularity and the med students and Sarah were able to define it); 
  • young man from a non-CPR community who had another problem but to my question was explaining his seizure meds to me when he had a seizure; 
  • woman from another coastal community who arrived with necrotic diabetic ulcer on the bottom of her foot and a glucose level of 456, who needed immediate hospitalization to save the foot (or her life, if gangrene was already too advanced); 
  • youth who last most of a toe in a bizarre bike accident and needed immediate attention; 
  • Down syndrome child of 2 1/2 in the remotest community that Sarah recognized immediately, who had never been diagnosed and who has the frequently-associated heart defect. At least Sarah and the med students could explain to the family what to expect re the toddler's development, and what would happened if they did or didn't elect to have the heart defect repaired.
!

Ila
Photo: child from a previous visit.

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Casa Maria Friday July 27th


boiled egg

Casa Maria ~ Parish Center. Join us for Casa Maria sandwich making! Be a part of the amazing St. Michael's team. Let's break our record!

Friday July 27th ~ 5:30pm, St Michael's Parish Center, 602 N. Wilmot.

Kitchen opens at 5pm, come anytime after that. Please bring  2 or 3 dozen peeled eggs! We get no extra eggs from the School students in the summer. Please bring medium sized boxes for transporting the lunches. Fruit boxes from Costco or banana boxes are ideal.

Karl will deliver the sandwiches (Thanks to Maurice for June 29th!)

NEXT CASA MARIA: FRIDAY AUG 24th. Mark your calendars! Casa Maria is every 4 weeks...
  • July 27th
  • Aug 24th
  • Sept 21st
  • Oct 19th
  • Nov 16th
  • Dec 14th

Friday, July 20, 2012

Announcements for Week ending July 28th

St. Michael’s Sunday School of Theology continues Sundays at 9 AM in the Womble Library. Right now we are watching Jesus and the Gospels, a series of lectures of DVD by Prof. Luke Timothy Johnson a former Benedictine monk and former teacher at Yale Divinity School. The course places the writing of the Gospels in the literary, religious, cultural and historical context of first century Palestine and the Greco-Roman world. All are welcome to watch these videos and join in the lively discussions that follow.

St. Michael’s Contemplative Prayer Group is organizing to begin again on Saturday, September 8. We will meet 9:30 – 11:00 am each Saturday in Our Lady of The Desert House of Prayer, north of the church. Parking is on the west side of the house. Come join the group and learn about Christian meditation and enjoy a short social time together. You will find it relaxing, peaceful and rewarding.

 √ Come celebrate midsummer on July 25, 2012 at 6:30 PM in the Parish Center, with our Bookkeeper’s Bash Midsummer Meal! Help our bookkeeper, Karen Blocher, celebrate her first year and hundred-plus pounds lost on her diet and exercise program. The Midsummer Meal will feature lean meat, grilled vegetables, a special salad and fruit for dessert, prepared by Chef Andy Bruno. Suggested donation is $12.50. Any money left over goes to “Faith Promise” to help with the church’s day-to-day expenses.

 √ TIHAN’S NEXT VOLUNTEER Orientation will take place Wednesday, July 25th at Grace St. Paul’s Episcopal Church (2331 East Adams, near Speedway and Tucson Blvd.) TIHAN’S Volunteer Orientation is a great way to learn more about HIV/AIDS, TIHAN and our current volunteer opportunities, and how you can help make a difference in our community. It is also your first step to becoming a volunteer with TIHAN. The cost of the orientation is $17 per person (scholarships are available). If you are interested in attending or if you would like more information, please contact us at 299-6647 or volunteercoordinator@tihan.org. To download a Volunteer Application Packet, click on “Volunteer.”

 √ The summer is hot and the need is great. St. Michael’s Food Pantry is running low on: peanut butter, juices, fruit, tuna fish, pork & beans and cereal. We continue to be grateful for your generous donations to the pantry for those less fortunate. Donate only if your circumstances will allow. Thank You for your continued generosity.

Thursday, July 12, 2012

Announcements for Week Ending on July 22nd

St. Michael’s Sunday School of Theology continues Sundays at 9 AM in the Womble Library. Right now we are watching Jesus and the Gospels, a series of lectures of DVD by Prof. Luke Timothy Johnson a former Benedictine monk and former teacher at Yale Divinity School. The course places the writing of the Gospels in the literary, religious, cultural and historical context of first century Palestine and the Greco-Roman world. All are welcome to watch these videos and join in the lively discussions that follow.


√ The summer is hot and the need is great. St. Michael’s Food Pantry is running low on: peanut butter, juices, fruit, tuna fish, pork and beans and cereal. We continue to be grateful for your generous donations to the pantry for those less fortunate. Donate only if your circumstances will allow. Thank You.

Come celebrate midsummer on July 25, 2012 at 6:30 PM in the Parish Center, with our Bookkeeper’s Bash Midsummer Meal! Help our bookkeeper, Karen Blocher, celebrate her first year and hundred-plus pounds lost on her diet and exercise program. The Midsummer Meal will feature lean meat, grilled vegetables, a special salad and fruit for dessert, prepared by Chef Andy Bruno. Suggested donation is $12.50. Any money left over goes to “Faith Promise” to help with the church’s day-to-day expenses.

TIHAN’S next volunteer orientation will take place Wednesday, July 25th at Grace St. Paul’s Episcopal Church (2331 East Adams, near Speedway and Tucson Blvd.) TIHAN’S Volunteer Orientation is a great way to learn more about HIV/AIDS, TIHAN and our current volunteer opportunities, and how you can help make a difference in our community. It is also your first step to becoming a volunteer with TIHAN. The cost of the orientation is $17 per person (scholarships are available). If you are interested in attending or if you would like more information, please contact us at 299-6647 or volunteercoordinator@tihan.org. To download a Volunteer Application Packet, click on “Volunteer.”

Save the date ~ Friday, July 20th at 6:30 pm. Join us for a fun evening of bowling at the “Lucky Strike Bowl” ~ 4015 East Speedway. All are welcome and invited to attend this summer evening of fun and fellowship. Sign-up sheets are located in the back of church.

Saturday, July 07, 2012

Announcements for Week ending July 15

~Save the dateFriday, July 20th at 6:30 PM. Join us for a fun evening of bowling at the "Lucky Strike Bowl" at 4015 East Speedway.  All are welcome and invited to attend this summer evening of fun and  fellowship. Sign up sheets are located in the back of the church.
         
 ~Sunday Lectionary Bible Study continues thru the summer. Meets twice on each Wednesday: 10AM  and 6 pm. All are welcome to join this lively Bible Study in the Womble Library.

 ~St. Michael’s Genealogy Writing Club meets each Tuesday at 10 am in the Womble Library.

 ~TIHAN's next Volunteer Orientation will take place on Wednesday July 25th at Grace St. Paul’s Episcopal Church (2331 East Adams, near Speedway and Tucson Blvd.) TIHAN's Volunteer Orientation is a great way to learn more about HIV/AIDS, TIHAN and our current volunteer opportunities, and how you can help make a difference in our community. It is also your first step to becoming a volunteer with TIHAN. The cost of the orientation is $17 per person (scholarships are available).  If you are interested in attending or if you would like more information, please contact us at 299-6647 or volunteercoordinator@tihan.org. To download a Volunteer Application Packet, click here or visit www.tihan.org then click on "Volunteer."

Tuesday, July 03, 2012

Hola from Guatemala!


A Caba family.

Hola folks.  In 45 minutes Team 2 leaves Nebaj for the longest walking trip -- Mirador Chajul, Xecoyeu, Santa Clara, Nueva Amachel, Antigua Amachel, Bella Vista, and Caba/Caba La Laguna.  The walk out from Caba to Chel is the really tough one.  We won't be back in e-mail contact until late July 16.

I thought we would be doing this with a few photos from Team 1 participant Hayme Leon, but they haven't reached me yet.  You will have to accept prose.

Everybody is alive and well, though Team 1 did have its moments -- very compressed trip, some minor illnesses, and one harrowing ride on a very narrow and rough 4WD mountain road with many obstacles, an inexperienced driver, and an overloaded vehicle.  I still have bruises where my upper arm kept banging against a metal pole used to stretch a loma (canvas cover) over the back in case of rain (we got to stay al fresco, no rain -- all umpteen of us standing in the back with the cargo).

GENERAL OBSERVATIONS

Militarization is continuing apace, with soldiers at every demonstration of people seeking social justice -- like the students occupying their school to protest changes in education plans, a block from Casa San Jose, where we stay in the Capital; and oh the road between Nebaj and Chajul, the Ixil Area soldiers carrying galils.  They looked so very young and out of place to me.  More evidence of this, and resistance, in the Ixil Area, where we are now.  Note:  under the Peace Accords, the army can be used only for protecting national borders, except in a national emergency, so all this activity is in violation.  Domingo Alvarez, who has driven both teams and all the meds and our personal packs to the points where we will start walking, says that when he sees the soldiers, he is reminded of all that transpired in the past, beginning when soldiers entered his village when he was 6, destroyed the village, and executed some of the leaders.

Domingo, who is also on the Lead Health Team and handles our money when it is turned over for payments to health workers and for other in-country medical needs, has been elected president of the overall 22-community CPR-Sierra organization.  He says he can do both.  It is very, very generous of him to give us his time as he starts to assume his new office.

Hydroelectric installation, massive on some formerly free-running wild rivers, is continuing apace in the Ixil Area, as is local resistance.  There are no local benefits in terms of more or cheaper electricity.  Everyone says the electricity is bound for Mexico and beyond.  Ironically, Nebaj, which has outgrown its electrical system, is still subject to daily brown-outs, especially in the evening and when it rains.  One passes slogans painted on rocks and on the highway, "The rivers and the holy earth are for the Ixil people," and "No to mining," and "No to hydroelectric."  Team 1 drove right by one of the installations, on the Finca San Francisco, where the finca guard told us the finca and hydroelectric were private property and we could not take photos or stop.  Once we passed him, we got some good ones of the hydroelectric, before the aforesaid harrowing trip over the mountain and down into Zona Reina, Uspantan, the second-largest resettlement community.

TEAM 1 HIGHLIGHTS (I have to finish everything in 10 minutes, now)

Among the team, incredible raw intelligence and some very useful skills -- Midwife-RN Kerry, and RN-diabetes expert Jordan, and artist Richard, among others.  All of us were a wee bit under-utilized, but the trip was useful and productive for all, including the loal health workers.  We were ably accompanied by Diego Lopez of the Equipo de Salud.

This trip was too compressed to admit much interaction with local groups, but we did get women's leader Nazaria Tum Sanic to give us an impressive overview of 30 years of CPR-Sierra history and a glance at current women's organization and activism.  In Nebaj, we also met with the Health Ministry Extension de Cobertura (Health extension services, where ther are no regular services) director, who welcomed our presence and gave us letters authorizing us to use Health MInistry limited medicines if ours gave out.  They also said their budget has been so constrained that they can no longer buy trimetroprin sulfa or local anesthesia for wound-suturing.  They begged us to try to find them 20 vials of lidocaine.  (hope my spelling is ok).

Team 1 then headed out for on-foot giras Chaxa, Santa Rosa, and Pal, Area Xeputul, to work with the local health promoters.  In Chaxa and Pal, we found somewhat-discouraged local workers.  In contrast, Chico in SAnta Rosa had his little two-room clinic well organized, and had meds.

Because of Kerry's presence, we saw many pregnant women and their midwives, to good effect.  We were able to reinforce advice that one woman should leave in advance of her due date, as her baby was very, very small.  In addition, we did more hemoglobin testing than in the past.  Preliminary results would suggest that there is less anemia in these communities than the astonishingly high figures passed around internationally; but we may need to factor in altitude and a few other variables.

Two points of interest, with more infor to follow when I get a break in late July:  A young coule in Pal who had a baby born with a growth that needs correction now that she is one year old waitied patiently for us and agreed to walk out with ust to the little hospital in Nebaj.  Because of the presence of all the giranos-as, the family received royal treatment.  They were advised to go to Santa Cruz de Quiche for special x-rays, to rule out spinal nerve involvement, and we were able to pay for the private x-ray (not the right term) with funds donated by Project friend [Sherley S. in Phoenix.  The very conscientious young father has delivered these to the social worker in Nebaj, and the Nebaj doctors decided that the surgery should take place in Guatemala City.  Plans are in the works.

Additionally, on the trail we heard Mateo's story about his early life.  He had met us between Chaxa and Santa Rosa.

More later -- especially re Team 2.  They are waiting, to begin the long drive and then the uphioll waalk into Mirador Chajul.

Abrazoa a todos.  Ila