Introduction
In
May of 2008, two friends visited
a third, who was doing volunteer
work in Nicaragua.
Before going, the two friends, Myra and Polly,
asked their friend Mateo if there was anything
they could bring to him.
Mateo said he didn't need anything, but he
would like to make a gift.
If Polly and Myra could bring $100, the three
could buy school supplies for about 100 kids who
attended a primitive school in a farming community.
If the women could bring $124, he said, the
four teachers who worked there could each have
a mop and broom for their classrooms, which
they had told him they needed.
The friends approached the Rotary Club of
Monroe, Washington. The members donated $600.
Overwhelmed, the three friends brainstormed
with some of the parents at the tiny, four-room
school.
They identified about $400 worth of needs for
the school, which operated without electricity or
plumbing.
The friends bought school supplies for every
child, water containers, teaching materials, a bright
pinata, rice and beans for the children's lunches to
fill the gaps in the government supply, and books.
With the remaining $200, they commissioned
a local welder to make soccer goal posts out of
metal pipe. With those, they created a soccer
field in the schoolhouse yard.
And, yes, the teachers got mops and brooms.
Amazed at what a few dollars could accomplish in
Nicaragua, the friends vowed to do more.
Together, they formed Vecinos, an initiative to
support education in rural Nicaragua.
They committed to adopt three rural schools and
raise funds to supply them with needed materials.
Every February, the start of the Nicaraguan
school year, they will return,
and spend every nickel of donated funds on the
materials that teachers and parents have said they need
the most.
All kids deserve a level playing field.
Events
Vecinos has successfully completed its first two fundraisers.
The first was kindly hosted by Eddies.
The second was a black-tie event kindly hosted by Oxford.
The two events have raised funds for Vecinos that will help to make a difference in the year ahead.
Costs
Here is are some examples of how
far your money can go in Nicaragua:
.09 ¢ = ruler
.09 ¢ = pencil sharpener
.60 ¢ = lined notebook for
elementary school
.75 ¢ = Taxi to anywhere
in the city
.15 ¢ = public transportation
to anywhere in the city
.56 ¢ = 1/2 liter of Coca-Cola
.51 ¢ = 1lb of Rice
.51 ¢ = 1lb of Beans
.25 ¢ = 1lb of sugar
$100 dollars:
Would provide about 40 kids in a
school a pen, pencil, and two
notebooks that would last them
the school year.
About us
Polly Keary, is the editor of the Monroe Monitor,
a community newspaper in Monroe, Washington.
She is also a long-time blues musician in the Seattle
area. While majoring in Communications at
the University of Washington, Keary minored in
Spanish with the idea of working in Central America
as a journalist. She lives in Everett, Washington.
Myra Ayers is a Leasing & Marketing Specialist for
one of the largest property management companies
in Washington state. She has a passion for
ballroom dancing & teaches kick boxing in her
spare time.