![]() |
| Priest Moises Rutilio Moran checks the water filters in a pond where he breeds fish at his church in Santa Ana, El Salvador |
Priest Moises Rutilio Moran didn't sit twiddling his
thumbs when the coronavirus pandemic struck and his church emptied -- like many
Salvadorans, he got creative helping combat the country's COVID-induced lack of
food.
Determined that his church in the city of Santa Ana
"shouldn't be a burden on the community," Moran and his staff dug a
pond and started selling affordable fish to the local community.
Some 50 kilometers (30 miles) east in El Chaparral, a
village of 107 families, children began rolling up their sleeves, cultivating a
vegetable garden that is providing food for the community.
The pandemic and its economic woes have sent the price
of fruit and vegetables soaring, and left Salvadorans scheming plans to feed
themselves.
"I know how to preach, teach the catechism,
manage groups, but launching a tilapias project, never," the 41-year-old
priest told AFP..
After churches were closed to prevent the spread of
the coronavirus, Moran started collecting groceries to help 1,700 families,
"not just poor people with houses made of (metal) sheets" but also
lawyers and engineers who lost their jobs.
However, he soon realized he no longer had the means
to pay for the electricity, water, telephone and internet at his church, Our
Lady of Rosario.
![]() |
Church caretaker Roberto Rivas prepares fish bred in a
pond to be sold to
parishioners and visitors in Santa Ana, El Salvador
|
Thus his project was born: provide cheap fish to the
community whose payments would keep the church running "in a reciprocal
manner."
On a makeshift table next to the pond, 65-year-old
church caretaker Roberto Rivas is in charge of gutting the fish.
While the work is rewarding, Rivas told AFP he hopes
the church "opens soon because in these worrying times the faithful need
us to accompany them."
After five months of closure, churches are tentatively
hoping to reopen their doors on August 30.
While many parish priests laid off their employees due
to a lack of resources, Moran's new enterprise means he's actually hired new
staff.
William Hernandez, 42, was left unemployed after the
pharmacy he worked in for 16 years closed due to the crisis.
Now he wields a net and catches fish "chosen by
the customer" while Omar Blanco, 29, serves as one of two workers making
deliveries by motorcycle.
![]() |
| A girl holds a bundle of radishes in the community vegetable garden in El Chaparral |
"It's an excellent initiative discovering sources
of work in the midst of a difficult situation in which we have to reinvent
methods (of generating income) for the church," priest Oscar Lagos told
AFP as he arrived with a cooler to buy some fish.
'Getting children involved'
In the village of El Chaparral radishes, peppers,
cabbages, tomatoes, spinach, blackberries and watermelons grown by the children
are a welcome boost.
"It's an initiative in our El Chaparral community
aimed at getting children and young people involved," said Victorina
Alvarenga, a 32-year-old mother who joins her nine-year-old daughter Sheyla in
the garden.
The vegetable patch is divided into plots named after
the child in charge. One part of the garden is dedicated to providing food for
the elderly.
"We're teaching children the value of solidarity
so that when they're adults, they'll be good people," said Alvarenga.
A month after planting seeds, the first harvest
produced huge radishes that were enthusiastically "ripped up" by the
children.
![]() |
A boy collects radishes in the El Chaparral community
garden
|
"I'm delighted because I'm bringing fresh food to
my family," said Sheyla proudly.
"I don't have any money but I bring healthy
food."
The idea has caught on and in the neighboring village
of Dimas Rodrigues a score of children have started another community garden.
"We want to produce our own food so we're not
dependent on the market," said the group's leader, Pedro Diaz, 22.
Felicia Mijango, in charge of a union of rural
communes, says the idea has its roots in the confinement of 10,000 Salvadoran
refugees who fled to Ocotepeque in Honduras as civil war raged a decade ago.
The refugees couldn't leave their UN camp that was
surrounded by barbed wire so they started growing their own fruit and
vegetables.
Mijango says her union actively supports around 100
family and community allotments with help from American and Canadian NGOs.




No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.