Paraguayan Dancing

Last week my son participated in his school’s Paraguayan dance celebration.  The dancing is a Paraguayan form of folclorico, a traditional style of Latin American dance.  He participated with his kindergarten class; each class from kindergarten to sixth grade performed different folclorico dances for their parents and faculty.  The boys dressed in black slacks, white shirts, straw hats donned with Paraguayan tricolor bands, and waist sashes also sporting the tricolor (the Paraguayan tricolor, its national color scheme, was inspired by the French red-white-blue tricolor flag).  I thought the students all performed very well; the bottle dancing sixth grader did a particularly splendid job.

My son did an excellent job dancing and wielding a broom.  He’s ready to tear up the dance floor.  I posted some photos of the dance — they tell a much better story than I.

Son waits to dance

Son in folklore costume

Son dances

Son wields broom

After the dance

 

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A Great Travel Destination – Rio de Janeiro

Dear Reader, here is an article my wife and I wrote for our weekly newsletter on our trip to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.  I thought I would share it with you since I haven’t blogged about the trip yet.  Enjoy!

If you are looking for a great great getaway, then consider visiting Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.  Our family vacationed there for four days in July.  We highly recommend it as a great diversion.

Rio is a city with stunning views.  Flanked to the north by the Bay of Guanabara and to the south by the Atlantic Ocean, Rio winds its way through valleys surrounded spectacularly jagged granite peaks and gorgeous sandy beaches.  We visited two of the city’s “must-sees” attractions, the Christ the Redeemer Statue, one of the new Seven Wonders of the World, and Sugarloaf Mountain.  We relaxed in Copacabana and dined in Ipanema, two of the city’s famous beachfront neighborhoods, and squeezed in a city center tour and shopping.  Even though we doubted whether Christ the Redeemer Statue should have been included among the new Seven Wonders of the World, we left convinced that it is truly a wonder.  The statue, together with unbelievably beautiful and sensuous landscape that it overlooks, is impressive.  Sugarloaf Mountain, a granite peak rising dramatically above Guanabara Bay, offers some of the best views of the city, including Christ the Redeemer.  The mountain is easily accessible by cable car.

Rio’s city center is dated but worth a half-day tour.  The former Imperial Palace of Brazil’s Portuguese monarchy offers a great jumping-off point to explore the cathedrals and colonial-era buildings that dot the city center.  The center is also home to the ultra-modern Rio de Janeiro Cathedral and the Arcos da Lapa, a defunct Romanesque aqueduct.  Negotiate your day-trip with a hotel-referred taxi driver who can suggest some good sites to see.  Although not touristy, the city center offers a window into the everyday lives of Cariocas (Rio’s residents) past and present.

If you visit Rio, consider staying in Copacabana, where your hotel will likely be across the street from the beach.  While Copacabana may not conjure images of the New York club of the same name popularized by crooner Barry Manilow – we saw just one nightclub on the strip – it’s still fun.  Visitors can entertain themselves for days on end riding the waves, sunbathing, playing beach games, or just people-watching.  Or one can chat it up with vendors who buzz around and peddle kitschy knickknacks and fake fashion.  Although livelier during Carnival, Rio’s beaches offer an eclectic mix of visitors and locals year round.

While Rio is a world-class tourist destination, security was our top concern during our visit.  As a result, we avoided nighttime excursions except for visiting the tourist market on Atlantic Avenue in Copacabana.  We only used taxis recommended to us by our travel agency or hotel.  Negotiate a price before accepting a taxi ride.  Don’t wear jewelry or flash cash.  Stay in crowded, touristy areas.  With the weak dollar, Brazil is not a cheap place to visit.  Plan to spend three times what you would in Asuncion for identical items.  Still, unforgettable moments in Rio could make your trip well worth it.

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Habitat for Humanity Paraguay

On Friday, I led a small group of volunteers to San Antonio, a town about 30 minutes outside Asuncion, to help Habitat for Humanity build houses for the poor.  Habitat’s Paraguay chapter, in collaboration with Project for the People of Paraguay, an NGO dedicated to helping Paraguay, kicked off its "Five Houses in Five Days" project.  The project is self-explanatory–about 100 volunteers worked together to build five small homes for the homeless.  We helped out toward the end of the project.  The weather was lousy, and we got lost a couple of times searching for the work site.  Still, we were able to help out a bit once we arrived. I wish we could have helped out more. 
 
This is the third volunteer project I’ve worked on in the past year.  The first one — ongoing work at the Rutherford B. Hayes Elementary School in Villa Hayes — is a labor of love to help improve a school that is the namesake of former U.S. President Rutherford B. Hayes.  It’s in conjunction with a larger project in honor of President Hayes, who decided on November 12, 1878 in favor of Paraguay to return a large portion of Paraguayan territory to Paraguay.  It had been occupied by the Argentines, who occupied the territory following the War of the Triple Alliance.  This year is the 130th anniversary, and I’m working a group to honor this anniversary — including refurbishing the Hayes School.  The third project is a $2,000 donation to an orphanage in rural La Colmena that a group of us completed in July.
 
I’m also involved with a team working to ease drought conditions in the Chaco for thousands of families without water.  The same is working on a project to donate medical kits to ten of the poorest villages in the country, medicines, and a few hospital beds.  The team will also fix a broken ambulance.  Most importantly, the team is working on a project to pipe water from an existing well to some villages half an hour away by foot, and redrill a contaminated well.  These villagers severely lack medical attention and access to basic needs such as water.
 
Yesterday I put the case of a 14-year-old girl in a rural village with a severe facial tumor in touch with a local NGO that could help her with tumor removal and reconstructive surgery.  Next week, I will meet with a Catholic brother who works in Tacumbu, one of Asuncion’s poorest neighborhoods.  He’ll give me a tour and show me areas where the neighborhood could use improvement with small volunteer projects.  I will also seek out the John F. Kennedy School for Delinquent Children in San Lorenzo, a suburb of Asuncion.
 
Whenever I have a bad day — of which I have had many lately — I remember that things could always be worse.  These projects remind me of that daily.
 
For the shutterbugs:  I posted photos of the Habitat project in a photo album.  Enjoy!