Truro News

Funds raised to assist Guatemala mission

Immaculate Conception Church hosts multicultu­ral night

- FRAM DINSHAW

TRURO, N.S. – Overwhelmi­ng. That was Brandon Verboom’s first impression of Guatemala as he stood on a dusty street surrounded by tin-shack homes.

“It was eye-opening for me, because 16’s fairly young and I’ve lived here my whole life, so I’ve never really experience­d that level of poverty before,” said Verboom. “It was really satisfying to go in and you could see the direct improvemen­t you’ve made on a family.”

Nearly a decade later, Verboom is returning to the Central American country with fellow members of Truro’s Immaculate Conception Church, alongside others from across northern Nova Scotia. As in previous years, they will be delivering cooking stoves to Guatemala’s poor.

Saturday, the church hosted a multicultu­ral night and silent auction as a fundraiser for the upcoming Guatemala trip. Its congregati­on members from as far away as India and Ecuador served up dishes from their home countries for guests.

The 28-strong Guatemala Outreach Project team will be in the country March 15-23, delivering 250 to 300 indoor cooking stoves to people in the villages Yerbabuena, Cerro Alto and Las Violetas.

Presently, many people in these villages use indoor pit fires to cook meals, a dangerous practice that can easily result in their flimsy dwelling burning down.

Reaching the villages is not easy. After landing in the capital Guatemala City, mission members will drive for about 90 minutes into the mountains.

Verboom’s fellow team member Stephen Ellis said that each stove unit costs $300. For 300 stoves that means $90,000. All Guatemala Outreach Project team members will pay their own way, freeing up as much money as possible for the people they are helping.

In 2010, the program installed a playground, delivered medical supplies and fixed up a school roof in the village of Jose. In the years since, team members have built more playground­s, delivered cooking stoves and library books and funded a medical clinic, as well as paying the tuition of two nursing students.

“It’s a homegrown project and that’s the big thing that the people here have supported for the last 10 years,” said Ellis. “We all think that it’s very important to share our time, talent and treasures.”

The Guatemala Outreach Project began when a woman from that country named Rosa Maria Oliva visited Truro 10 years ago. As she did in her homeland, she attended church services with her children at Immaculate Conception.

“As simple as it sounds, she said ‘you guys should come and do a project in Guatemala,’” said Ellis.

A decade later, another Guatemalan who is now an Immaculate Conception member offered her own take on the outreach project.

Carolina Hauser, who ran the Guatemalan food stall with her husband John, said she was “very grateful.”

“I’m very happy, because there are many people from different nations that are helping people in my country,” said Hauser.

For more informatio­n and updates, visit the Guatemala Outreach Project’s Facebook page.

“It was really satisfying to go in and you could see the direct improvemen­t you’ve made on a family.” Brandon Verboom

 ?? FRAM DINSHAW/ TRURO NEWS ?? A few of the food stalls on offer at the Multicultu­ral Night, Silent Auction and Pub fundraiser at the Immaculate Conception Church on Jan. 29. Pictured are Syria/lebanon, Hungary, Jamaica and China.
FRAM DINSHAW/ TRURO NEWS A few of the food stalls on offer at the Multicultu­ral Night, Silent Auction and Pub fundraiser at the Immaculate Conception Church on Jan. 29. Pictured are Syria/lebanon, Hungary, Jamaica and China.
 ?? FRAM DINSHAW/ TRURO NEWS ?? Carolina Hauser, from Guatemala, now attends the Immaculate Conception Church in Truro. She served a traditiona­l chicken soup from her birth country during the Multicultu­ral Night, Silent Auction and Pub fundraiser on Jan. 26 at her church.
FRAM DINSHAW/ TRURO NEWS Carolina Hauser, from Guatemala, now attends the Immaculate Conception Church in Truro. She served a traditiona­l chicken soup from her birth country during the Multicultu­ral Night, Silent Auction and Pub fundraiser on Jan. 26 at her church.
 ?? FRAM DINSHAW/ TRURO NEWS ?? Brandon Verboom, left, and Joseph Blaauwendr­aat are both off to Guatemala next month to deliver cooking stoves to impoverish­ed villagers. Both members of the Guatemala Outreach Project at Truro’s Immaculate Conception Church, they were at the Multicultu­ral Night, Silent Auction and Pub fundraiser Saturday.
FRAM DINSHAW/ TRURO NEWS Brandon Verboom, left, and Joseph Blaauwendr­aat are both off to Guatemala next month to deliver cooking stoves to impoverish­ed villagers. Both members of the Guatemala Outreach Project at Truro’s Immaculate Conception Church, they were at the Multicultu­ral Night, Silent Auction and Pub fundraiser Saturday.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO FACEBOOK/ ?? This rural Guatemalan home was pictured during a previous project visit. Unlike some homes that are made out of corrugated iron, this one used sturdier breeze blocks.
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO FACEBOOK/ This rural Guatemalan home was pictured during a previous project visit. Unlike some homes that are made out of corrugated iron, this one used sturdier breeze blocks.
 ?? STEPHEN ELLIS/ CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO ?? This is what one of the new cooking stove units looks like, including a closed compartmen­t for the fire, a safer alternativ­e to using an open pit.
STEPHEN ELLIS/ CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO This is what one of the new cooking stove units looks like, including a closed compartmen­t for the fire, a safer alternativ­e to using an open pit.

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