|

Shoebox success: Trip to
Nicaragua emphasizes holiday philanthropy
By STACEY PALEVSKY,
Courier Staff Writer
WATERLOO --- Five miles off the
main road in Chinandega, Nicaragua, Dave Buck met a
102-year-old man who slept on a dirt floor in a small
shelter made from flattened oil barrels.
The man's only Christmas wish was a wheelchair.
With that request in mind, Buck returned from his trip
last week reluctant to begin his holiday shopping.
"The last thing I want to do
is get out the credit card and buy a lot of stuff I
don't need," Buck said.
Buck traveled to Nicaragua with a team of 14 people from
the Cedar Valley, including seven members of the
Waterloo Downtown Rotary Club.
The group's main purpose was to distribute supplies to
impoverished Chinandega children. In the fall, 37 Cedar
Valley organizations formed a partnership with the
Rotary Club for the Shoebox Project, which filled 2,500
boxes with clothes, toys, pencils and soap.
"There are so many groups who have helped --- I
feel really proud of what Americans have done in
Nicaragua," Buck said.
Nicaragua is the second-poorest country in Central
America. In Chinandega, a civil war and Hurricane Mitch
left 2,000 people homeless, scavenging for food in the
town dump.
The plight of Chinandega's people was first publicized
in 1995 by the Rev. Marco Dessey, who initiated a
revitalization, including the creation of schools and
houses.
"You come home and you set your alarm and make
coffee and pick up the phone, and it's such a huge
contrast to the way they live," Rotary member
Sheila Faust said. "Most people have never seen
these things."
The trip marks the second year Faust and Buck traveled
to Nicaragua.
Last year, Rotary member and Shoebox Project
coordinators Buck and Steve Thorpe delivered 1,500 boxes
to Chinandega.
They upped the ante by 1,000 when Nicaragua's first lady
contacted Thorpe and asked if they would be able to
bring additional boxes.
Besides the 2,500 boxes the team transported, it also
brought 100 pounds of candy. Forming an assembly line in
their hotel, they filled 800 bags with Starburst and
Tootsie Rolls.
Thorpe said the trip reminded him people do have the
power to make a difference. Thirty more homes had been
built since their first trip.
"(The locals) are getting to the point where they
can take care of themselves and are more
self-sufficient," Thorpe said. "But they
wouldn't have that opportunity without communities like
Black Hawk County. ... But there's still so much that
needs to be done."
Extensions of the Shoebox Project include providing
diapers and blankets for young mothers and hundreds of
notebooks and pencils for school-age children.
The team also will begin raising funds to send a
wheelchair to the 102-year-old man.
"People would ask me, 'How was your trip? Did you
have fun?'" Faust said. "That is the most
difficult question to answer. It wasn't in any way a
vacation, but it was far better than any vacation I've
ever been on."
|

|
A girl from Chinandega,
Nicaragua, smiles after receiving a shoe box
of
goodies from Waterloo Rotary Club member Steve
Thorpe.
Photos submitted by Dave Buck |
|