Archive for the ‘Culture’ Category
I was prompted by Jazmine’s recent blog on the recognition of indigenous rights to actually read through the UN declaration. Each point is significant, but Article 13 seems particularly relevant to the people served by Roots & Wings. Article 13 1. Indigenous peoples have the right to revitalize, use, develop and transmit to future generations [...]
Posted by Kristen Keller on February 26th, 2011
Quetzaltenango is the second largest city in Guatemala, after the capital, Guatemala City. It is situated high in the mountainous western highlands, and, unlike the jungles of the Petén, is fairly temperate year-round, if quite rainy during the rainy season. The people call the city “Xela” (short for the indigenous name Xelaju) and even the [...]
Posted by Lindsey Dixon on February 12th, 2011
Today is Lunar New Year’s Eve. As with any holiday, it’s a time of starting afresh, discarding the fears and uncertainty we had in the past lunar year, taking stock of what we have accomplished, and looking forward to an even better start to the year of the rabbit. In my home country, Singapore, to [...]
Posted by tammyrwi on February 2nd, 2011
Fair-trade coffee is a growing industry in the United States. According to the 2009 edition of the Fair-Trade Almanac, imports of green coffee – that is, coffee harvested using methods not damaging to the environment – “have grown on average nearly 75% a year since 1999.” While major corporations like Starbuck’s have been quick to [...]
Posted by Shadi on February 1st, 2011
The Wall Street Journal published an excellent article this week all about Guatemala and the booming coffee tourism business there. Visitors from all across the globe are traveling to Guatemala to learn about coffee: how it’s planted, harvested, refined and made ready for consumption each day. The WSJ article follows the process at one particular [...]
Posted by Lindsey Dixon on January 31st, 2011
Guatemalans celebrated the New Year with major organized festivities. The streets were engulfed with locals, who watched magnificent displays of fireworks burst in the midnight skies. Locals also hoped to attract good luck with their tradition of adorning themselves in new clothes. Dancers wore decorated face masks and animated the streets with lively, rhythmic versions [...]
Posted by admin on January 20th, 2011
This past year over 2,000 children under the age of five died in Guatemala due to malnutrition. Guatemala actually has some of the highest rates of malnutrition and growth-stunting in the world, yet most people never hear about this situation in the news. Poverty, obviously, is one of the biggest causes of child malnutrition, but [...]
Posted by Lindsey Dixon on January 9th, 2011
Though in the United States the Thanksgiving holiday means turkey, stuffing, family and football, the origins of the holiday are quite different—and often forgotten in the gluttony that ensues every fourth Thursday in November. Depending on whom you ask, Thanksgiving is either a fantastic holiday filled with good food and socializing, or a grotesque reminder [...]
Posted by Lindsey Dixon on November 24th, 2010
Fíjese que… When you live in Guatemala, this is a phrase you will hear all the time. Fijarse literally translated means: to take notice, to pay attention. This is the literal translation but there is so much more that comes along with the phrase. The way things happen in Guatemala is different from that of [...]
Posted by maryrwi on March 25th, 2010
I was going to write about an indigenous community outside of Guatemala, but I just finished Naomi Klein’s excellent book, The Shock Doctrine, and the systematic destruction indigenous people’s way of life is still fresh in my mind. While I don’t have the book in front of me, I do have this handy link from [...]
Posted by Shadi on February 28th, 2010
Language is an inseparable part of one’s culture. Why else would the French ban the word “email” from their government documents (they prefer to use the phrase “courier electronique)? To accept even a fraction of another culture’s language is to forever lose a part of your own. h Colonization – and its newer brother, neocolonization [...]
Posted by Shadi on February 13th, 2010
In the recent past, my husband Oscar, my family of 3 children (at the time; there are now 4) and I moved to Honduras for a job opportunity. We went to live in Choluteca, a city in the southern part of Honduras, near the Pacific coast. This was a very interesting time for us, which [...]
Posted by jeannerwi on December 12th, 2009
Tammy, one of our marketing volunteers, talks about learning Spanish language.
Posted by tammyrwi on December 8th, 2009
This is one of my favorite recipes using that starchy wonder, the plantain, which is a staple in many Central American countries like Guatemala. If you’ve been intimidated by plantains in the past, give this one a go — you’ll be pleasantly surprised! You’ll need 4 very ripe plantains — look for ones that have [...]
Posted by admin on September 28th, 2009
Plantains aren’t just healthy, they are delicious! Join us as we start exploring the wide world of plantain recipes.
Posted by admin on September 22nd, 2009