IT business leaders build bridges in Nicaragua | How to navigate |
IT business leaders build bridges in Nicaragua
By Leslie Barry
During the week celebrating Martin Luther King Jr.s birthday,
a group of information technology business leaders took their own
time and spent their own dime to help build a community center outside
of Managua, Nicaragua, in the municipality of Ticuentepe.
The group of 20 was comprised mostly of federal IT business leaders
from industry and government, including a couple of enterprise architects
and a chief information officer.
This is the second year that I have put together a cadre of interested
individuals to travel to Nicaragua with the help of Bridges to Community,
a nongovernmental organization. My cousin founded the organization
13 years ago, and I went on my first trip in 2004 with her family.
She returned energized to share the experience with her friends
and colleagues. In January 2006, the first group of 15 IT business
leaders went to Ticuentepe to build two houses in the community
of La Borgoña. This year, four of the original 15 returned,
bringing 16 new colleagues to share the cross-cultural experience.
The group spent most of its time in Las Enramadas, near La Borgoña,
building the first story of what will eventually be a two-story
community center. Two of the towns residents, Levia and her
daughter Noemi, for whom the IT leaders built a home in 2006, had
joined a sewing cooperative that Bridges helped start last year.
The community center will house, among other things, this new cooperative.
Levia and her family -- Mercedes, Yorleni and Hoover -- walked to
the building site every day while the group was there, and they
became a living bridge for those that had participated the previous
year, connecting the previous years work to this year's effort.
Bridges first began working in Las Enramadas in 2004 and completed
a general housing project. After a second phase of the housing project
began, the town said it needed a community center. The housing payments
collected from the first phase of the housing project were used
to finance part of the community center, which had been in planning
stages for a year and a half. The IT business leaders work brigade
and donations are helping finance the other half. The volunteers
laid the foundation and built the walls to the first level of rebar.
It will take two other groups to finish the center.
The community center will be a commons building, the home of the
womens sewing cooperative and a shelter for Bridges groups.
As a commons building, the center will host medical visits from
the ministry of health -- there is no health post in the community
-- and community-centered projects and meetings such as literary
classes. Ivette Mindoza, the community leader working alongside
the IT group said this center is a dream realized; that every
wheelbarrow full of dirt and rocks feels weightless because they
are full of happiness and joy.
The volunteers, who lived and worked in a rural community, saw firsthand
how 80 percent of the world lives. They returned with a deeper understanding
and appreciation for the struggles and joys of our global community.
The work was hard, but rewarding. The camaraderie and bonds created
were intense. The feeling of appreciation of what people in the
Washington, D.C., area have and what is important has increased,
along with a feeling of humility that doing so little can have such
a huge effect on improving others lives.
A week after leaving Nicaragua, the group received the following
e-mail message from one of our trip leaders, Ana Argudo of Bridges:
Thank you for inspiring those women. Thank you for planting
the seed in something that will blossom beyond their wildest dreams,
and mine. I never thought that there would ever be a community center
in Las Enramadas. I never thought that women who never get to see
beauty magazines could conjure up fashionable bags. I never thought
Lorena would ever get out of her shell or that Yennifer would ever
leave her house. But they have, and it's because of people like
you that support them. What a wonderful thing to love people that
you barely know. To build real connections to people you cannot
even communicate with. I was humbled by your sincerity, hard work
and generosity. Thank you for giving of yourself and allowing Nicaragua
to steal a piece of your hearts. You will forever be in theirs and
mine.
The volunteers received a gift far greater than what they gave and,
it goes to the point that it is not how much you get out of life
but how much you give. Folks are lining up to go again are
you ready? If youre interested in joining a future
trip, contact leslie.barry@gtsi.com, or check out www.bridgestocommunity.org.
-- Leslie Barry is vice president of government affairs and
business development at GTSI









