Monday, June 15, 2009

A Day in Catarina - Nicaragua Internship Summer 2009




The natural beauty of Central America always takes my breath away. Coming from the slightly hilly Midwest, the mountains, valleys, volcanoes, and lagoons of Nicaragua dwarf any hill or sand dune I've ever climbed in Michigan. Yesterday I was once again amazed by the view from a mountainside overlooking a lagoon with a lake farther on that disappeared into the horizon. With binoculars we could see the contours of the forests on the surrounding hills, and between the lagoon and lake the roofs of a town were just distinguishable.

It is within these stunning surroundings that 5.5 million residents of Nicaragua live. However, what often draws my attention away from the natural beauty is the stark contrast between this beauty and the situations in which many residents of Managua live. Just today on the way to work we past the fruit and vegetable stands. I had always thought these shelters were used during the day by sellers and then abandoned at night as the people went home. Instead, a co-worker told me that the fruit vendors actually live in the back of those stands, with beds, televisions and all their possessions. I was shocked, but it was one more example of the daily survival of some sectors of Nicaraguan society.

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